SAR to tender new phosphate rail track section in January

12 December 2025

 

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Saudi Arabian Railways (SAR) is expected to float another multibillion-riyal tender to double the tracks on the existing phosphate railway network connecting the Waad Al-Shamal mines to Ras Al-Khair in the Eastern Province.

MEED understands that the new tender – covering the second section of the track-doubling works, spanning more than 150 kilometres (km) – will be issued in January.

The new tender follows SAR’s issuance of the tender for the project's first phase in November, which spans about 100km from the AZ1/Nariyah Yard to Ras Al-Khair.

The scope includes track doubling, alignment modifications, new utility bridges, culvert widening and hydrological structures, as well as the conversion of the AZ1 siding into a mainline track.

The scope also covers support for signalling and telecommunications systems.

The tender notice was issued in late November, with a bid submission deadline of 20 January 2026.

Switzerland-based engineering firm ARX is the project consultant.

MEED understands that these two packages are the first of four that SAR is expected to tender for the phosphate railway line.

The other packages expected to be tendered shortly include the depot and the systems package.

In 2023, MEED reported that SAR was planning two projects to increase its freight capacity, including an estimated SR4.2bn ($1.1bn) project to install a second track along the North Train Freight Line and construct three new freight yards.

Formerly known as the North-South Railway, the North Train is a 1,550km-long freight line running from the phosphate and bauxite mines in the far north of the kingdom to the Al-Baithah junction. There, it diverges into a line southward to Riyadh and a second line running east to downstream fertiliser production and alumina refining facilities at Ras Al-Khair on the Gulf coast.

Adding a second track and the freight yards will significantly increase the network’s cargo-carrying capacity and facilitate increased industrial production. Project implementation is expected to take four years.

State-owned SAR is also considering increasing the localisation of railway materials and equipment, including the construction of a cement sleeper manufacturing facility.

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Yasir Iqbal
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