Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Turkey secures $1.3bn for high-speed railway

The high-speed line will cover 140km between Yerköy and Kayseri Pexels/Serkan Atay
The high-speed line will cover 140km between Yerköy and Kayseri
  • Support from UK, Austria, Poland, Italy
  • Line will connect Yerköy and Kayseri
  • Saving of 6,500 tonnes of CO2 a year

Financing worth more than $1.3 billion has been secured to build a high-speed electric railway in Turkey.

The deal, which was structured by Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, was enabled by support from UK Export Finance (UKEF) and three other export credit agencies: Austria’s OeKB, Italy’s Sace and Poland’s Kuke.

The agreement allows Turkey’s Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure, acting through the General Directorate of Infrastructural Investment, to develop 140km of electric railway between Yerköy, in central Anatolia, and Kayseri to the south.

The new line will connect to the Ankara-Sivas route, which opened in April last year. It aims to reduce road congestion and cut net emissions by more than 6,500 tonnes of CO2 a year.

It is the third high-speed railway project that UKEF, Sace and OeKB have jointly backed in Turkey, with their support helping to lay more than 900km of track. 

The financing package comprises a $1.13 billion loan guaranteed by the export credit agencies and a $241 million commercial loan facility supported in part by the Islamic Corporation for the Insurance of Investment and Export Credit. 

The project will be delivered by a joint venture between Turkish contractors Doğuş İnşaat, Çelikler and Özkar.

The State Railways of the Republic of Turkey, known as TCDD, operates about 14,000km of railway, including 219km of high-speed line.

Another high-speed line, which will connect Ankara and İzmir in 3.5 hours, is set to start operations in 2027, said Abdulkadir Uraloglu, Turkey’s minister of transport and infrastructure last September. 

A 2053 transport and logistics masterplan, prepared by the ministry, aims to increase the network to 28,590km and the number of provinces connected by high-speed services from eight to 52.

The financing announcement was made during a visit to Turkey by Kemi Badenoch, the UK’s secretary of state for business and trade.

She said talks were planned to “elevate” the bilateral trade relationship.

UK firms are expected to supply steel, pipes and other equipment for the rail project.

Oussama Kaissi, CEO of Islamic Corporation for the Insurance of Investment and Export Credit, said the Yerköy-Kayseri line was part of Turkey’s “visionary approach to a sustainable transport system”. 

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan announced plans last year for a $17 billion infrastructure and transport project linking southern Iraq to Turkey.

It will connect Grand Faw Port, a commodities port in Iraq, by rail and road to the border with Turkey. It is expected to be complete in 2025.

Uraloglu said this week that the UAE and Qatar were considering joining the project.

“We will implement the project hopefully, in collaboration with Iraq. The UAE and Qatar also seem to be interested in this process,” he told Anadolu, Turkey’s state-run news agency.

Latest articles

PIF's Starbucks shareholdings were cut almost by half from 6.3 million shares to 3.8 million

PIF slashes Starbucks stake as it cuts US stocks by $15bn

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) has slashed its US equity holdings by 42 percent to $20.6 billion, including its stake in Starbucks, the global coffee chain that has suffered calls for a boycott as a result of the Gaza conflict. The latest US government data highlights funding challenges facing the Saudi giga-projects.  The filing […]

Tunisia olives

Soaring olive oil exports help Tunisia balance books

Tunisia’s soaring olive oil exports have almost doubled to close to $1 billion in just five months, helping it claw back its current account deficit.   However the increased revenues merely “paint over the cracks” and the country is still probably heading towards a sovereign default, according to an economic expert. Tunisia’s current account deficit narrowed […]

Iraqi prime minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani attends licensing rounds for 29 oil and gas exploration blocks at the oil ministry's headquarters in Baghdad

Falling oil prices deepen Iraq’s fiscal imbalances, says IMF

Iraq’s fiscal imbalances have worsened due to significant fiscal expansion and lower oil prices, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). “The ongoing fiscal expansion is expected to boost growth in 2024 at the expense of a further deterioration of fiscal and external accounts and Iraq’s vulnerability to oil price fluctuations,” the Washington-based fund said in […]

Saudi aluminium producer Talco is offering 12 million shares

Aluminium producer Talco announces Saudi IPO

Aluminium producer Al Taiseer Group Talco Industrial Company (Talco) is the latest entity to reveal initial public offering (IPO) plans in Saudi Arabia. The Riyadh-based company, which was set up in 2009, is offering 12 million shares, a 30 percent stake, on the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul) at a nominal value of SAR10 ($2.67) per share. […]