Qatar starts work on UAE transport link

7 January 2026

 

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Qatar has made a head start on constructing its side of the transport link that will connect it to the UAE.

Qatar Rail has appointed French engineering firm Egis to provide engineering consultancy services for what it described as the “rail and road link project between Qatar and the UAE”, according to documents seen by MEED.

MEED understands that Egis submitted the lowest bid of QR139.95m ($38m) in July last year, following the submission of bids the previous month.

Canadian engineering firm AtkinsRealis was the only other bidder for the tender, which was tender number 3496/2023.

The exact scope of the project is not specified, but it is believed to be linked to the West Link project on the UAE side, which is in the advanced stages of procurement.

The UAE’s Etihad Rail is expected to finalise the contract within the first quarter of this year to build the 40-kilometre project, which will connect the Abu Dhabi mainland to islands in the Gulf near Qatar.

In June, MEED reported that the UAE had engaged two contracting groups on an early contractor involvement (ECI) basis for the project.

The two contracting groups selected are Greece’s Archirodon, partnering with local Western Bainoona Group (with Surbana Jurong as design firm), and Beijing-based China Harbour Engineering Corporation, partnering with local NMDC (with Hewson Consulting as design firm).

The project involves constructing a 40km road link with two lanes in each direction. The road is planned to start near Ras Ghumais in the Western Region and extend to a ferry terminal on Makasib Island, which will then connect to Qatar.

The ECI process requires selected contractors to submit methodologies for the project and a design proposal during the initial stages of procurement. It is understood that the conceptual design and social, economic and business case studies commenced early last year.

Previous plans

In 2005, Abu Dhabi and Doha were reported to be establishing a joint company to oversee the implementation of a proposed UAE-Qatar causeway.

The crossing would have significantly cut journey times. At present, traffic between Qatar and the UAE has to pass through 125km of Saudi Arabian territory.

Back then, the causeway was planned to start near Sila in Abu Dhabi and extend to the south of Doha.

The scheme ultimately stalled. Problems included difficulties with the route, which infringed on Saudi Arabia’s territorial waters.

In June 2017, the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt severed diplomatic and economic ties with Qatar, preventing any potential joint infrastructure projects.

In January 2021, the Al-Ula Declaration restored diplomatic ties, and economic cooperation has gradually resumed.

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Yasir Iqbal
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