Skip to main content

Chile launches ambitious transport plan

In an effort to boost a weakening economy, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet has announced a nearly US$4.2 billion transport infrastructure plan, including one new metro line in Santiago, cable car systems in three other cities and rail projects. The plan includes US$1.9 billion in new concessions, with the expansion of public-private partnerships (PPPs) to the metro system and US$2.2 billion in works directly funded by the government. In Santiago, the program involves developing feasibility studie
November 7, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
In an effort to boost a weakening economy, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet has announced a nearly US$4.2 billion transport infrastructure plan, including one new metro line in Santiago, cable car systems in three other cities and rail projects.

The plan includes US$1.9 billion in new concessions, with the expansion of public-private partnerships (PPPs) to the metro system and US$2.2 billion in works directly funded by the government.

In Santiago, the program involves developing feasibility studies for a new metro line under a PPP model to alleviate congestion on line No. 1, which runs east-west and transports 43 per cent of the subway's passengers.

The president also detailed plans to extend line No. 3, currently under construction, and line No. 2, with a total investment of US$1.17 billion.

The government will also invest an additional US$317 million in expanding metro capacity with new trains.

State company Metro de Santiago is currently building the 22km-long line No 3, which will connect Ñuñoa in eastern Santiago and Huechuraba in the north of the city, and line 6, a US$1.06 billion project that will run 15.3 kilometres from centrally located Providencia to Cerrillos in the west.

The government will also build three cable car systems in northern Iquique and Antofagasta cities and in central Valparaíso, an investment of US$386 million.

In southern Chile, the government will add five kilometres to Concepción's urban rail system and will carry out feasibility studies to add new railway lines in Temuco and Puerto Montt.

Two days ago, Bachelet announced new concessions of US$6-8 billion, on top of the national infrastructure plan announced earlier this year that includes US$9.9 billion in new concessions through 2020, and US$18 billion in public works projects through 2021, including highways, airports and reservoirs.

"This is new and additional. It's a renewed concessions portfolio in public transport, urban and suburban highways and ports for US$6 billion to US$8 billion," Bachelet told reporters.

Bachelet aims to increase public infrastructure spending to 3.5 per cent of GDP by the end of the decade from the current 2.5 per cent.

Related Content

  • Oslo moves to ban city centre traffic
    November 5, 2015
    Cars will be banned from central Oslo by 2019 to help reduce pollution, local politicians said this week, in what they said would be the first comprehensive and permanent ban for a European capital. According to Reuters, the newly elected city council, made up of the Labour Party, the Greens and the Socialist Left, said the plans would benefit all citizens despite shop-owners' fears they will hurt business. "We want to have a car-free centre," Lan Marie Nguyen Berg, lead negotiator for the Green Party
  • Cost benefit goes under the microscope
    August 21, 2017
    Conventional cost benefit analysis (CBA) of plans for urban smart mobility initiatives needs serious rethinking, according to a recently-completed European study. The three-year Evidence Project (the Project) emerged in response to concerns about the availability and quality of documented research – including CBA – required to prove that investment in sustainable urban mobility plans (SUMPs) can be economically beneficial. Covering 22 sectors ranging from electric vehicles to shared spaces, the Project clai
  • Siemens to build new streetcars for expanding Charlotte Area Transit System
    November 29, 2016
    The Charlotte City Council in the US has chosen Siemens to build six new S70 streetcars for the Charlotte Area Transit System (CATS), the public transit system operated across Mecklenburg County and four surrounding counties. The vehicles will be designed with advanced hybrid technology that features a battery storage system, which allows for operation in portions of Uptown without the need for power from an overhead wire. The new streetcars will add to the 42 Siemens-built light rail vehicles currently
  • EVs: Time for a rethink
    December 14, 2021
    Given a growing body of evidence that EVs are not the clean, green machines they are made out to be, Andrew Bunn suggests they can only be part of the puzzle – not the answer to environmental problems