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South Caucasus: making tracks along the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway
 Transport 
(11.01.2010)

Text by Andy Markowitz

To politicians, business interests, train-spotters, and international observers, the planned Baku-Tbilisi-Kars railway is many things: a new and improved route for moving cargo through the South Caucasus; a potential magnet for foreign investment; an example of tightening ties among Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey; a sharp stick in Armenias eye.

But at track-side, the projects potential impact can be boiled down to one mantra: jobs, jobs, jobs.

An idea first floated in 1993 after Turkey closed its border with Armenia, shutting off the existing rail link between Kars, Turkey, and Gyumri, Armenia, the "BTK" project was formally launched in 2007. The $600 million effort aims to establish the South Caucasus as a major link in the Eurasian transit corridor by building 105 kilometers of new track from Kars to Akhalkalaki, Georgia, and modernizing the existing line through Tbilisi to Baku. Work has proceeded in fits and starts. Both the United States and the European Union, which previously supported pipeline projects following similar routes, refused to provide financing for the railway because it bypassed Armenia. (Azerbaijani oil revenue is instead providing the lions share of the money, including a virtually interest-free $220 million loan to Georgia for its section.) Construction in Georgia was suspended for a time in 2008 due to environmental issues and the Ossetia war.

Originally set to go into operation in 2010, the line is now on track to open in 2011, according to Azerbaijani transport officials. (A project overview at the rail-industry website railway-technology.com puts the opening date at late 2012.) Turkey and Armenias agreement last fall to reopen their border does not seem to have put a damper on the project, which experts predict will triple passenger traffic and cargo volume on the regional rail network over the next two decades.

On the ground along the route, such financial and political concerns take a back seat, as residents in towns where the railroad was once a powerful economic engine look to the BTK to bring badly needed jobs and boost wages - or dismiss it is a political ploy to enrich outside interests. TOL and EurasiaNet sent photographers to three stops on the line - Agstafa, Azerbaijan; Tsalka, Georgia; and Kars, the western terminus - to take a look at the old railway and ask locals how they thought the new one might change their lives and communities.

 

Eurasianet

 

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