Transport in Mauritania

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Template:Short description

File:Coastal TransSaharan Highway in Mauritania.jpg
Photograph of the Cairo–Dakar Highway taken near Nouadhibou

Citizens of Mauritania have limited access to transportation. The single-line railroad serves mining interests with very occasional ad hoc passenger services. Apart from two infrastructural road developments there are few paved roads.Template:CIA

Railways

File:Railways in Mauritania.svg
Railways in Mauritania.

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There are no rail links with adjacent countries.

In 2008, a railway was proposed that would link Nouakchott with Tiguint, Mederdra, R'Kiz, Leguatt, Leeleibatt, Menjem Boffal, Kaedi, and Bofal.

Maps

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Timeline

2007

  • Sunday, August 5, 2007 - Sudan, China to Build $630 Mln Mauritania Railway.

Sudan's Danfodio Holding and China's Transtech Engineering have signed an agreement to build a 460-million-euro ($634 million) railway linking Mauritania's capital Nouakchott with southern phosphate deposits at Bofal.[4] The Template:Convert line would run close to the southern frontier with Senegal. It is hoped that the new line would link with existing lines just across the border in Senegal, Mali.[5] There is no through link to Burkina Faso. There are problems of choice of gauge.

2008

  • May - 8 new EMD locomotives.[6]

2013

2014

Motorway

There are 450 km of Motorway in Mauritania (in 2010), connecting Nouakchott to Nouadhibou along a coastal route. A motorway linking Nouakchott to Rosso is under construction (due for completion in 2012).

Highways

File:Road of Hope 02.jpg
The Template:Ill in Mauritania

Mauritania has only about Template:Convert of surfaced roads, Template:Convert of unsurfaced roads, and Template:Convert of unimproved tracks.[8]

The country's size and harsh climate make road maintenance and repair especially problematic.[8] Overland travel is difficult and roadside assistance is almost nonexistent.[8] Public transportation is not safe and road conditions in Mauritania are poor, particularly in the interior.[8] Driving in Mauritania can be treacherous, and many Mauritanians drive without regard to traffic signs or rules.[8] Roadway obstructions and hazards caused by drifting sand, animals, and poor roads often plague motorists.[8]

International highways

The Cairo-Dakar Highway in the Trans-African Highway network passes through Mauritania, linking Nouakchott to Rabat, Tangiers, Algiers, and Tripoli. The section between the capital Nouakchott and the port of Nouadhibou was paved by 2018; only a few kilometers remain unpaved at the Moroccan border fr:Transport en Mauritanie. From Dakar there are links throughout western Africa.

The north-western end of the Trans–West African Coastal Highway is considered by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) to originate in Nouakchott.

Waterways

Ports and harbors

Atlantic Ocean

(from north to south)

Senegal River

Merchant marine

  • None as of 2002.

Airports (paved)

See Airports in Mauritania

  • 9 in total (2002)
  • 3 are of length 2,438 to 3,047 m
  • 6 are of length 1,524 to 2,437 m

By city:

Airports (unpaved)

See Airports in Mauritania

  • 17 in total (2002)
  • 2 are of length 2,438 to 3,047 m
  • 5 are of length 1,524 to 2,437 m
  • 7 are of length 915 to 1,523 m
  • 3 are of length under 914 m

See also

References

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Template:Economy of Mauritania Template:Africa in topic

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