Europeans bidding for KL-Singapore High-Speed Rail
13 Feb 2018|2,008 views
As plans for a high-speed rail link between Kuala Lumpur and Singapore become more concrete, European builders are throwing their names into the hat. Siemens of Germany, Alstom of France, Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane of Italy and Porr of Austria are forming a consortium with Malaysian engineering group George Kent to bid for the mega project, it was announced yesterday.


10 Japanese companies, including East Japan Railway and Sumitomo Corp, have joined forces to put in a bid. And a Chinese consortium of eight companies, led by China Railway Corp, will also be competing for the project.
Bids must be submitted by the middle of this year, with the contract expected to be awarded by year-end. The European consortium brings together Siemens and Alstom, which have had extensive experience in building cross-border high-speed railway projects.
Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane has expertise in railway operations. George Kent brings with it local knowledge of the Malaysian market. It is partnering Porr, a track work provider.
Commenting on the bid, Alstom Asia-Pacific Senior Vice President Jean-Francois Beaudoin said, "Alstom, with its expertise in complex high-speed projects, has been keenly looking at this tender and seeking the best partnerships - locally and internationally - to offer the finest solution to Singapore and Malaysia.


A joint tender for the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore High-Speed Rail project was issued by the Malaysian and Singaporean government-owned utilities MyHSR Corp and SG HSR on 20th December.
The high-speed rail will cut down door-to-door journey times between the two cities to 90 minutes, from around four hours by car today. The trains will be travelling at around 350km/h.
Observers reckon the Chinese have an edge because of their extensive recent experience in building a domestic high-speed rail network, the world's most extensive.
The Japanese, however, have a reputation for quality as well as the longest history of building such projects. The Europeans are experienced in building cross-border rail links.
As plans for a high-speed rail link between Kuala Lumpur and Singapore become more concrete, European builders are throwing their names into the hat. Siemens of Germany, Alstom of France, Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane of Italy and Porr of Austria are forming a consortium with Malaysian engineering group George Kent to bid for the mega project, it was announced yesterday.


10 Japanese companies, including East Japan Railway and Sumitomo Corp, have joined forces to put in a bid. And a Chinese consortium of eight companies, led by China Railway Corp, will also be competing for the project.
Bids must be submitted by the middle of this year, with the contract expected to be awarded by year-end. The European consortium brings together Siemens and Alstom, which have had extensive experience in building cross-border high-speed railway projects.
Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane has expertise in railway operations. George Kent brings with it local knowledge of the Malaysian market. It is partnering Porr, a track work provider.
Commenting on the bid, Alstom Asia-Pacific Senior Vice President Jean-Francois Beaudoin said, "Alstom, with its expertise in complex high-speed projects, has been keenly looking at this tender and seeking the best partnerships - locally and internationally - to offer the finest solution to Singapore and Malaysia.


SG HSR Pte Ltd will be the subsidiary that will take charge of Singapore's end of the KL-Singapore High-Speed Rail
A joint tender for the Kuala Lumpur-Singapore High-Speed Rail project was issued by the Malaysian and Singaporean government-owned utilities MyHSR Corp and SG HSR on 20th December.
The high-speed rail will cut down door-to-door journey times between the two cities to 90 minutes, from around four hours by car today. The trains will be travelling at around 350km/h.
Observers reckon the Chinese have an edge because of their extensive recent experience in building a domestic high-speed rail network, the world's most extensive.
The Japanese, however, have a reputation for quality as well as the longest history of building such projects. The Europeans are experienced in building cross-border rail links.
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