Pretoria–Maputo railway


Pretoria–Maputo railway, also called Delagoa Bay railway, Iron railway and Eastern railway, is a railway that connects the city of Maputo, Mozambique, to the city of Pretoria, in South Africa. It is 567 km long, in 1067 mm gauge.
The Mozambican section, between Maputo and Ressano Garcia, is managed by the state-owned Mozambique Ports and Railways company, and it is officially known in Mozambique as the Ressano Garcia Line; in turn, on the South African stretch, between the cities of Komatipoort and Pretoria, the administration is done by the company Transnet Freight Rail.
Its main maritime logistics facilities are at the Port Maputo and Port of Matola.

History

The construction of a railway line to connect the Republic of Transvaal to the port of Lourenço Marques, in Portuguese East Africa, was preceded by a long planning phase. The Pretoria government tendered the project, winning the concession for a private railway company in 1870, promising areas of 850 farms as payment guarantee. The construction project had to be postponed because the licensed company was unable to obtain the capital initially required. After several years of preparation, the government decided to take control of the construction in 1876. The Portuguese engineer and officer Joaquim José Machado carried out a new survey of land in 1881 and 1882 to find an ideal route, as some gold fields on both sides of the Crocodile River should have easy access to a rail connection.
In 1872, the colonial administration of Mozambique granted, for the first time, a concession to build a railway line from Maputo to Pretoria. A corresponding agreement was concluded in 1875 between the government of the Republic of Transvaal and that of Portuguese East Africa. However, it was only on March 1, 1890, that the route from Maputo to the Mozambican border station Ressano Garcia was opened.
An obstacle to route planning on the South African side was the steep mountain positions and the deep valleys near Komatipoort, in the area of the Crocodile River. These terrain characteristics also delayed the construction of an efficient road. In addition, in the 1880s, a financing contract worth half a million pounds on the Amsterdam capital market was eventually lost. Construction began on June 2, 1887 and was completed after seven years on October 20, 1894, so that the entire route was opened to traffic on November 2, 1894. The official opening took place in July 8, 1895, in a ceremony chaired by the president of Transvaal Paul Kruger, attended by the Mozambican colonial administrator António Enes.
On the South African side the line was operated by the Netherlands–South African Railway Company - NZASM. After the end of the Second Boer War, the railroad was transferred to the private company Central South African Railways and from 1910 to the state-owned company Railways of South Africa.
In the course of a government policy aimed at economic self-sufficiency under Pieter Willem Botha, coupled with the changing political situation in South Africa, the construction of the Komatipoort railway began in 1983, passing through Eswatini; connecting with the Goba railway, another extension was made, giving rise to the Richards Bay railway, which connects to the port of Richards Bay. Products from East South Africa could thus be disposed of in politically safe territory, in a specific sea port.

Railway branches

The Pretoria–Maputo railway has six important branches:
In Maputo, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Limpopo railway and the Goba railway.
In Komatipoort, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Komatipoort railway.
In Matsulu/Kaapmuiden, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Morebeng–Matsulu railway.
In Machadodorp, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Machadodorp–Ermelo railway.
In Wonderfontein, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Koornfontein railway.
In Witbank, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Witbank-Klipspruit railway.
In Pretoria, the Pretoria–Maputo line connects with the Sentrarand railway and Cape to Cairo Railway.