Ulaanbaatar Railway
Ulaanbaatar Railway is the national railway operator of Mongolia. It was established in 1949 as a joint venture between the Mongolian People's Republic and the Soviet Union. The company is jointly owned by the Mongolian and Russian government through Russian Railways, with each having a 50% stake.
Rail transport is an important means of travel in the landlocked country of Mongolia, which has relatively few paved roads. According to official statistics, rail transport carried 93% of Mongolian freight and 43% of passenger turnover in 2007. The Mongolian rail system employs 12,500 people. The national operator is '''UBTZ. This can be a source of confusion, since MTZ is a distinct company established in 2008 to maintain UBTZ infrastructure. The Mongolian Railway College is located in Ulaanbaatar.
The infrastructure of UBTZ consists of 1,815 km of broad gauge lines. UBTZ employs 14,046 people, owns 110 locomotives and about 3,000 wagons. The UBTZ network consists of two main lines:
- the Sukhbaatar-Zamyn-Üüd line, running north to south;
- the Ereentsav-Choibalsan line.
History
A separate railway line exists in the east of the country between Choibalsan and the Trans-Siberian at Borzya; however, that line is closed to passengers across the Mongolia-Russia border; passenger trains terminate at Chuluunkhoroot. This line used to have a spur line to the uranium mine at Mardai, however this spur line was torn up and sold in the late 1990s/ early 2000s.
For domestic transport, daily trains run from Ulaanbaatar to Darkhan-1, Sukhbaatar, and Erdenet, as well as Zamyn-Üüd, Choir and Sainshand. Mongolia uses the with a total system length of.
The Mongolian Railway is slated to cover by year 2025. The coverage track distance will get increased by. Mongolian railways transported 20.5 million tons of freight in 2013, which is close to the system's full capacity.
Transporting transit cargo between Russia and China is an important source of revenue for the country's railway system; in addition to this, railways are used to transport domestic coal to power plants. As of November 2023, Tavantolgoi-Zuunbayan railway and the Khangi-Mandal crossing on Mongolia’s border with China has been completed adding 226.9 km across the south-east of Mongolia.
Proposed lines
A 2010 Mongolian government plan proposed of new track, for the primary purpose of connecting Dalanzadgad and Choibalsan, to be built in three stages:- the first stage, totaling and linking Dalanzadgad–Tavan Tolgoi mine–Tsagaan Suvarga mine–Züünbayan, Sainshand–Baruun-Urt, Baruun-Urt–Khööt mine, and Khööt–Choibalsan ;
- the second stage, totaling and connecting the first stage with the Chinese border, linking Nariin Sukhait mine–Shivee Khüren, Tavan Tolgoi–Gashuun Sukhait, Khööt–Tamsagbulag–Nömrög, and Khööt–Bichigt ; and
- the third stage, totaling ) and not described in detail, but including a link with Tsagaannuur on the Russian border and a line from Ulaanbaatar to Kharkhorin.
Rolling stock
As Mongolia's railroads are not electrified, UBTZ relies entirely on Diesel traction. Most common locomotives are M62 variants, including five rebuilt 2Zagal double engines. Other engines include TEM2 and TE116 variants, Dash-7 and two Evolution locomotive on lease from GE. In October 2010, Ulaanbaatar Railway ordered 31 2TE116UM diesel freight locomotives from Transmash.Maps
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Tourist attractions
- Mongolian Railway History Museum