GCC railway authority receives asset management bids

3 October 2025

The authority overseeing the development of the GCC railway network has received technical bids from firms for an asset management contract covering the overall scheme.

“The tender was issued about two months ago and the contract is expected to be finalised early next year,” a source close to the project told MEED at the Global Rail event in Abu Dhabi on 1 October.

“The General Secretariat of the Cooperation Council for the Arab States of the Gulf – the authority entrusted with the implementation of the project – has also set a deadline of 2030 for the project to be operational,” the source added.

The latest development follows the awarding of a contract to prepare the operational plan to a joint venture of German consultancy Dornier and India’s Balaji Railroad Systems.

The GCC railway project has continued to progress since the GCC Secretariat’s official announcement in January 2021, which effectively restarted the initiative. A string of recent announcements and commitments means that all six GCC states have either declared or signalled plans for their sections of the rail network.

GCC leaders approved the establishment of the GCC Rail Authority in January 2022. It was tasked with policymaking and coordination among member states to ensure smooth project delivery and operation.

GCC railway line

According to the plan, the railway will stretch over 2,177 kilometres (km), starting in Kuwait, passing through Dammam in Saudi Arabia, reaching Bahrain via a planned causeway, and continuing to Qatar, the UAE, and finally Muscat via Sohar in Oman.

Within the member states, the rail spans 684km in the UAE, 663km in Saudi Arabia, 306km in Oman, 283km in Qatar, 145km in Kuwait and 36km in Bahrain.

The project has been designed to allow passenger trains to run at a speed of up to 220 kilometres an hour (km/h), and freight trains at 80-120km/h.

With high levels of project activity, government investment and the momentum of the Al-Ula Declaration, current efforts to restart the GCC railway project may see more success than past attempts. If the railway is finally completed, it could prove transformational for a region that feels connected to the world but divided between its constituent parts.

 


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Yasir Iqbal
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