“A BREAKTHROUGH”
Deputy Minister of Planning and Investment Tran Quoc Phuong earlier called the new line “a breakthrough” in the country’s infrastructure that would boost the country’s GDP by an average of 0.97 percentage points annually.
“It is the wish of the people and the determination of the political system to have an international-standard high-speed railway,” he said prior to the approval.
The National Assembly had in 2010 scrapped this same project, then estimated at US$56 billion, over fears it was too costly.
But the project’s potential impact has changed dramatically, Martin said, adding that there was “growing momentum” behind high-speed rail projects across Southeast Asia, where Laos and Indonesia have both completed rail lines in recent years.
“For Vietnam … it’s about becoming an even stronger player in a region that’s rapidly embracing high-speed rail,” he said.
The new rail line will stop at 23 stations in 20 different cities and provinces, boosting connectivity between the regions and giving locals more travel options.
“The high-speed railway … will make it more convenient for many people to travel”, said university student Pham Dang Quang, speaking onboard a train between Hanoi and the port city of Hai Phong on Saturday.
He said he was looking forward to the day he could “take the train between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City in the morning and get back home in the evening”.
The project is scheduled to take just eight years – beginning in 2027 and aiming for completion in 2035 – although the country has a history of overruns when it comes to major infrastructure projects.
Hanoi’s second metro line opened this year after nearly a decade’s delay while Ho Chi Minh City’s first metro route was originally supposed to start operations in 2018. It has still not opened.
According to the Global Quality Infrastructure Index 2023, Vietnam ranks 52nd out of 185 economies, far below several countries in the ASEAN region.