ADVERTISEMENT

Two-and-a-Half Mile Train Helps S. Africa Move Ore Off Roads

Record-Breaking Train Launched as S. Africa Moves Ore Off Roads

(Bloomberg) --

Transnet SOC Ltd., South Africa’s ports and rail company, on Thursday launched a train with a world-record number of wagons in a bid to move heavy trucks carrying metal ore off the nation’s roads, where they are causing damage and congestion.

The train, which had 375 wagons and was more than 4 kilometers (2.5 miles) long, carried 23,625 metric tons of manganese ore, Transnet said in a statement. The route it traveled is 861 kilometers from Sishen in South Africa’s Northern Cape province to the west coast port of Saldanha.

Two-and-a-Half Mile Train Helps S. Africa Move Ore Off Roads

South Africa competes with Australia for the length of its freight trains. In Australia the trains transport iron ore mined by companies including Rio Tinto Plc to ports.

“This is another breakthrough for the heavy-haul railway industry,” Transnet Freight Rail’s general manager, Brian Monakali, said. “Rio Tinto Australia recently started with the implementation of driver-less trains in their iron ore railway system. Transnet has now successfully operationalized the 375-wagon train.”

The previous world record was a 342-wagon iron-ore train, according to Transnet.

Manganese is used in steelmaking. South Africa has the word’s biggest deposits of the ore and Transnet has tripled the amount it transports since 213 to 15.1 million tons a year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Antony Sguazzin in Johannesburg at asguazzin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: John McCorry at jmccorry@bloomberg.net, Rene Vollgraaff, Robert Brand

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.