
BUENAVISTA TOMATLÁN, Mexico – The Mexican Army patrolled the streets of the western state of Michoacán on May 22 to improve security in a region tormented by violent drug cartels. About 4,000 army soldiers and marines and 1,000 Federal Police Officers have been deployed to the state, but they’ll leave once security has improved and the state government can hold its own. (Alfredo Estrella/AFP)
BRASÍLIA, Brazil – Brazilian authorities recently said they expect a US$16.5 billion, high-speed train service between São Paulo and Rio to start operating as early as 2018.
“The deadline for the train to be ready is 2020 but our target is 2018,” said Bernardo Figueiredo, president of the state-owned Planning and Logistics Firm (EPL), which is responsible for new multimillion-dollar projects for transport infrastructure across the country.
Bidding to choose which company will build and operate the train will take place May 29, 2013, while the auction to pick who will handle the related infrastructure work for the 500-kilometer (311-mile) rail link will take place in early 2014, he told foreign correspondents.
High-speed train technology essentially comes from abroad, and the government “wants tested technologies and operators with established track records,” Figueiredo said, pointing to German, French, Spanish, South Korean and Japanese firms.
The bidding for the high-speed train has been postponed repeatedly at the request of the companies involved.
Figueiredo said authorities were easing the “main risks” and obstacles to secure foreign investment, separating the construction and operation of the train, offering public financing of up to 60% of the value of the contract and facilitating imports of products Brazil does not make.
But Brazil, now the world’s sixth-largest economy, still insists on the technology transfer.
President Dilma Rousseff’s government has just launched a US$66 billion plan to build highways and rail lines across the country, with private participation.
“We want an infrastructure adapted to the country’s economic growth,” Figueiredo said.
[AFP (Brazil), 25/08/2012; Paraná Online (Brazil), 24/08/2012]
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