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The city of Luanda will soon have its first tramway line once the partnership between the Angolan government and the German firm Siemens is formalised.
Luanda, the capital city of Angola currently home to 9.2 million people, will soon be equipped with environmentally-friendly public transport infrastructure. A tramway, the Luanda Light Railway project is currently being negotiated with the German engineering group Siemens via its subsidiary Siemens Mobility.
€1.3 billion project, co-financed by the Angolan Ministry of Finance and the private sector. The first 39 km double-track line will link the port area of Luanda to the town of Kilamba. Once formalised Siemens Mobility will be responsible for supplying 68 four-car light vehicles.
Siemens, the company based in Munich in southern Germany, will also be responsible for implementing the signalling, telecommunications and traction power supply systems for a total length of 149 kilometres, as well as the traffic control system for the future Luanda tramway. The initiative will be the first of its kind in this Central African country, where people are accustomed to using buses and taxis to get around on a daily basis.
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These new tracks will be added to the African tramway network spread across 15 cities on the continent, including Casablanca and Rabat-Salé in Morocco, which have six operational lines with a total of 156 stations. But it is Algeria that has the largest number of stations (173) in North Africa, with seven tramways in the cities of Algiers, Constantine, Oran and Sétif. East Africa, meanwhile, has been consolidating its position since 2015, with the Addis Ababa tramway serving up to 120,000 passengers in the Ethiopian capital.