Skip to main content

Thailand expands transportation infrastructure

The Thai government is expanding its current transportation systems with plans for 55 transportation projects worth US$72 billion which are expected to be completed by 2020. Of the US$72 billion, 64 percent will be spent on 31 rail projects, 24 per cent on 13 road projects, 7 per cent for seven water transportation projects, and 4.75 per cent is for four air transportation projects. These projects are designed to make Thailand a crossroads for the ASEAN logistics network, enabling cities in the region to be
March 11, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The Thai government is expanding its current transportation systems with plans for 55 transportation projects worth US$72 billion which are expected to be completed by 2020. Of the US$72 billion, 64 percent will be spent on 31 rail projects, 24 per cent on 13 road projects, 7 per cent for seven water transportation projects, and 4.75 per cent is for four air transportation projects.

These projects are designed to make Thailand a crossroads for the ASEAN logistics network, enabling cities in the region to benefit from the improved transportation linkage between Thailand and its neighbours and between ASEAN members, reducing logistics costs and promoting tourism within the region.

The road links are expected to boost border trade, of which for the first three quarters of 2012 were valued at US$ 22.7 billion, while new investments in rail projects are designed to reduce logistic costs and minimise transportation time.

The Thai government will also be issuing tenders for four high speed train routes, which it says will help reduce commuters’ travel time, lower the cost of transporting goods, and improve the environment by reducing pollution and energy consumption. In Bangkok, where new roads cannot be built, electric train routes will be expanded from the current 40 kilometres to 468.8 kilometres.

The government is planning to finance the projects through revenue from state enterprises, fifty per cent through government revenue, 32 per cent through state owned enterprises and loans, and eighteen per cent through public and private investment.  Thailand’s minister of transport, Chadchart Sittipunt wants to make this national transportation expansion project a national agenda and turn it into contingency plan which will be continued by successive governments.

The Thailand Board of Investment (BOI) is aware of the importance of expanding Thailand transportation infrastructure and its impact on the development of Thailand, and has pledged to support logistic and infrastructure investment project by offering tax incentives and other benefits for projects involving transportation infrastructure.

Related Content

  • Diverse development of tolling business models
    April 25, 2013
    A diversity of tolling business models offers a wider toolbox of highway finance options, as the IBTTA’s Patrick Jones explains. The business models for America’s tolled highways have gone through several different evolutions over the last 75 years, reflecting a succession of shifts in transportation policy and politics, financing and funding models, urban patterns, customer needs, and technology. And with more and more decision-makers expressing renewed interest in tolling, it’s that very diversity that ma
  • Florida's free flow tolling eases congestion, improves safety
    July 24, 2012
    A decade since Florida's Turnpike Enterprise first deployed electronic toll collection, the organisation's Director of Toll Operations Rick Nelson and Tom S. Knuckey of PBS&J look at progress. A decade on from the deployment of Florida's Turnpike Enterprise's state-wide SunPass pre-paid Electronic Toll Collection (ETC) programme, transponder sales have ballooned from 5,000 to more than 4,000,000. Over 70 per cent of the state's turnpike drivers participate in the system and transponder sales continue to gro
  • Ability to keep in touch on US buses woos travellers
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford finds evidence of a new trend in American intercity travel: that better access to data sources on the move is tempting passengers away from air travel and onto surface modes. In the US the ease of use of Portable Electronic Devices (PEDs) is successfully wooing long-distance travellers away from airlines and onto surface public transport, according to just-published research. Using data from field observations of 7,028 passengers travelling by bus, air and train in 14 US states and the Distri
  • Ability to keep in touch on US buses woos travellers
    February 1, 2012
    David Crawford finds evidence of a new trend in American intercity travel: that better access to data sources on the move is tempting passengers away from air travel and onto surface modes. In the US the ease of use of Portable Electronic Devices (PEDs) is successfully wooing long-distance travellers away from airlines and onto surface public transport, according to just-published research. Using data from field observations of 7,028 passengers travelling by bus, air and train in 14 US states and the Distri