Dubai rail line makes room for VIPs
Published: September 9, 2009
Tags: Dubai, rapid transit line, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, The Railway Consultancy, United Arab Emirates

A train is tested during a trial session of the Dubai metro on Monday. The $7.6 billion rapid-transit line was set to open Wednesday. AP Photo by Kamran Jebreili
Adam Schreck
AP Business Writer
Dubai, United Arab Emirates — Dubai is opening the Arabian Peninsula’s first metro system, hoping to capture the world’s spotlight on the catchy date of 9/9/09 whether the sleek system is fully ready to go or not.
The rapid transit line has been slotted together at breakneck speed, much like the often traffic-clogged city it aims to serve. In true Dubai style, it even promises a VIP section for higher-paying customers who don’t want to mix with the rest of the public using the public transport line.
Officials are eager to portray the $7.6 billion project as a rare piece of good news amid the negative press that’s swamped the sheikdom, which has had its once-buzzing economy hit hard by the global downturn.
Dubai’s ruler, Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, characterized the project as a vital piece of infrastructure that could revitalize the city, much like the fast-growing state airline and ports that helped put Dubai on the map.
“It’s the start of something,” he told reporters on the eve of the project’s launch. “It is like when the first plane flew for Emirates (airline) and the first container ship arrived into port.”
For many of Dubai’s foreign guest workers, the rail project could mean far quicker commutes in a sprawling city-state where shared taxis, packed vans and creaky wooden boats are among the most visible forms of public transportation.
Getting wealthier residents to give up their beloved Hummers and Toyota Land Cruisers will be a bigger challenge in a country where generous government fuel subsidies do little to discourage driving.
Dubai “has grown up as a car-dependent kind of place,” said Nigel Harris, managing director of The Railway Consultancy in London. “This is about a culture change. … It’s getting people out of their cars that’s always difficult.”
The opening has the feel of being rushed. Invitations to the unveiling ceremony were being hastily sent out as recently as Monday. Only 10 of the inaugural red line’s 29 stations are ready to open — a fact the head of the transit authority announced last week.
He also revealed that the project, launched 3½ years ago, is about 80 percent over budget.
The delay means stations at the airport and one of the city’s biggest shopping malls will open, but those outside several densely populated areas where commuters live won’t.
The remaining stations on the 32-mile red line are due to open by February. A second line is expected to enter service in June — three months behind schedule.
“We’re all waiting for it, to reduce the traffic,” said Mohammed Kunhi, a 26-year-old courier from India who estimates he spends two to three hours stuck in traffic daily.
Officials say the system is one of the world’s most advanced.
Driverless, remote-controlled trains will whisk passengers along an elevated line that snakes over and under numerous bridges crisscrossing the city’s main multilane highway before heading underground in the city center.
A screen between passengers and the track allows stations to be air conditioned — not an insignificant consideration given that temperatures routinely top 110 degrees Fahrenheit and the summer humidity is oppressive. Wireless Internet is being promised throughout.
And, in a nod to Dubai’s premium tastes, every train will reserve the front for big spenders willing to pay double for leather seats in the system’s “gold class” section.
The elite seats, like the Internet and the chilled stations, are an effort to coax at least some of Dubai’s SUV-loving residents off the roads. Analysts say that could be tough given the heat and a lack of sidewalks in many parts of the city.
Still, many commuters have high hopes.
Sreejesh Aerampalli, a 28-year-old mailroom clerk from the Indian state of Kerala, said he expects the transit line will significantly shorten his often 1½-hour trip between home downtown and work at a faraway office park.
“The metro is better,” he said while shading himself from the midday sun. With “no traffic, (it will be) very easy to come to work,” he said.
The system is operated by Serco Group, a British contractor whose businesses include running rail networks and prisons in England and Australia, providing computer support to the U.S. military, and managing Britain’s nuclear arsenal.
The launch is for invited guests only. The metro opens to the public Thursday.
Rides start at about 50 U.S. cents. A gold-class trip on the length of the system costs up to $3.55, one-way.
- < Firm picked for UW project faces scandal (10:50 a.m. 9/9/09)
- Researchers seek cash from switchgrass >
Comments
-
Taxed Enough Already says:Posted on 09/10/09 at 6:31 am
-
Rail not Roads says:
Yeah, taxed, we should just build more roads for additional transportation capacity. Apparently, these roads are free?
Posted on 09/10/09 at 2:40 pm -
De-railed says:
We should build more roads. And no, they are not free…but, between gas taxes, road fuel taxes, registration fee’s, and these sorts of ‘user fee’s', the roads pay for themselves by those that use them, and in fact turn a profit for the state. You do remember how often Governor Doyle raided the transportation fund to attempt to balance the state budget. How do you suppose there was a surplus to raid? This will not occur with rail. They need to be constantly and permanently subsidized to exist. Do the math…billions to build, and a buck or two from riders on near empty trains. The tragic, ironic humor is that most people who support forms of rail, will themselves never ride them. They just like the idea of rail systems.
Posted on 09/10/09 at 3:02 pm -
KarenJeffries says:
Quick question for “De-railed” : Why is it that government spending on transit is a ‘subsidy’ while spending on roads is an ‘infrastructure investment’?
Posted on 06/25/10 at 5:31 pm
![[Print]](http://dailyreporter.com/wp-content/plugins/tdc-sociable-toolbar/print.png)
![[Email]](http://dailyreporter.com/wp-content/plugins/tdc-sociable-toolbar/email_2.png)


For all you train fans, soak in some of the numbers and data about this system, which by the way, is the type of train system Gov Doyle dreams of.
The latest cost figure thrown out by the ‘rail pushers’ is around 200 million for the Kenosha – Milwaukee line. Oddly enough, that’s almost exactly the same distance as this Dubai train in this article. So, what are the real numbers?
7.6 BILLION…..let that sink in for a moment. AND, the Sheik says “it’s the start of something…like the first plane..” So how many more of these does he want? But, it is typical of all rail projects, like a crack addict, the first just gets you hooked, and you always need more.
They are hoping to get people out of their suv’s, and hoping it succeeds even though they admit this region is not very accepting of it. (sounds very similar to our region)
Lastly, at 50 cents a ride, it will take around 1.5 trillion rides to pay for the initial cost. How many years will it be before they hope to pay for this?
They are an oil-rich nation, we are a tax hell that continues to drive businesses away. They may be able to afford this…we, cannot.