Indonesias and Southeast Asia's first high-speed rail project is expected to connect the country's largest cities of Jakarta and Bandung, the capital of West Java, covering a distance approaching 142.3 kilometres. As of March 2021, PT KCIC stated that the construction of the Jakarta-Bandung High Speed Rail has reached 70 percent and is expected to be completed by the end of 2022. No trains can run until track construction is completed. Plans and studies have been in the works for high-speed rai PTJakarta Cakratunggal Steel Mills has worked with WIKA under reinforced steel contracts since 2016. Our experience is that PT CS is very cooperative in implementing product order, stock availability, the quality that meets the standard, and competitive pricing. See Our Project Menara-BNI-Pejompongan Tol Trans Sumatera Ruas Bakauheni Shopa wide range of playsuits jumpsuits products and more at our online shop today. Eligible for free shipping. Categories KantorPemasaran. Jl. P Jayakarta 117, Blok B 52-54, Jakarta 10730. Phone: 6009087, Fax: 6018992 . Processing Factory. Jl. Raya Kosambi Curug km2, Walahar, Klari NewHigh speed railway contractor consortium Jobs in Indonesia available today on JobStreet - Quality Candidates, Quality Employers Search Jobs MyJobStreet Company Profiles Career Advice More ChinaRailway Signal & Communication Corporation Limited (hereinafter referred to as CRSC) is the provider of railway signal and communication technology, products and services, the precursor and leader in the China rail transit control industry, one of the biggest rail Baca Lebih Lajut . This article has been translated by PwC Indonesia as part of our Indonesia Infrastructure News Service. PwC Indonesia has not checked the accuracy of, and accepts no responsibility for the content. Investor Daily - Pemerintah Suntikkan Rp4,3 Triliun ke Proyek KA Cepat Jakarta-Bandung 13 October 2021 By Thresa Desfika, Triyan Pangastuti, Muawwan Daelami, and Arnoldus Kristianus Jakarta – The government is investing trillion in PT Kereta Api Indonesia KAI to cover the lack of funds for the construction of Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway that increased by around Rp27 trillion or 31% from the original cost. The investment is provided in the form of an additional state capital participation PMN for PT KAI, one of the four SOEs State-owned Enterprises in PT Pilar Sinergi BUMN Indonesia. The construction of the high-speed railway that spans 142 km is predicted to be finished at the end of 2022, which is 12 months later from the original schedule. Other SOEs in PT Pilar SInergi BUMN Indonesia PSBI are PT Wijaya Karya Persero Tbk, PT Jasa Marga Persero Tbk, and PT Perkebunan Nusantara PTPN VIII. To work on the high-speed railway, PSBI is cooperating with a Chinese company by establishing the KCIC consortium. PSBI’s ownership portion in KCIC reaches 60%, while the Chinese company owns the remaining 40%. When the consortium PT Kereta Cepat Indonesia China KCIC was established, KCIC was obligated to provide a capital of around trillion. This is 25% of the estimated cost of Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway worth US$ billion or trillion in total. PT Pilar Sinergi BUMN Indonesia that owns 60% of KCIC shares must provide a capital of around trillion, while the Chinese consortium Beijing Yawan that owns 40% of the shares must provide trillion. With 25% provided from their own capital, the remaining 75% or around trillion US$ billion will be provided by a loan from China Development Bank. PT Kereta Api Indonesia Persero or KAI President Director, Didiek Hartantyo, said that, as a follow-up action from Presidential Regulation Number 93/2021 that appointed KAI as the new leader of PSBI, the PMN for KAI was prepared to provide the base equity capital for Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway. Previously, PSBI’s leader was PT Wijaya Karya Pesrero Tbk as they owned 38% of the shares, while KAI owned 25%, PT Jasa Marga Persero owned 25%, and PT Perkebunan Nusantara PTPN VIII owned 12%. The trillion PMN will be used to cover the lack of capital from the SOE consortium, Rp240 billion from WIKA, Rp440 billion from KAI, Rp540 billion from Jasa Marga, and trillion from PTPN. “So, the trillion PMN will be used to provide the base equity capital,” Didiek said when he was contacted by Investor Daily on Monday 11/10. He explained that, to work on the high-speed railway project, PSBI established a joint venture with a Chinese consortium, Beijing Yawan, called PT Kereta Cepat Indonesia China. The fund required for the high-speed railway spanning 142 km reaches US$ billion. Special Staff for SOE Minister, Arya Sinulingga, explained that, previously, the funding would be provided from the state budget as the four SOEs involved in the project was impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic, which hindered the capability of the state-owned companies in financing the cooperation project between Indonesia and China. “This is what forces the government to provide funding so that the high-speed railway can be excellently constructed,” Arya said to an interviewer on Sunday 10/10. In article 4 paragraph 2 of Presidential Regulation Number 93 of 2021, it is mentioned that other funding can be provided from the state budget to maintain the progress of a national strategic project by considering the fiscal capacity and sustainability. Then, paragraph 3 of article 4 states that financing can be provided from the state budget in the form of state capital participation for the SOE consortium leader and/or guarantee for the SOE consortium leader. “Presidential Regulation Number 93/2021 appoints PT KAI as the consortium leader, while the previous leader was PT Wijaya Karya Tbk. So, this is nothing. The issue is only that [the SOEs are impacted by the pandemic]. Wherever you go, in almost all countries, the government is involved in their high-speed railway project. Almost all countries are like that,” Arya said. He added that the construction progress of Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway project had reached 80%. With funding from the government later, Arya continued that the project completion was expected to be accelerated. Cost overrun On a separate occasion, SOE Deputy Minister, Kartika Wirjoatmodj, revealed that, previously, there were several issues regarding Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway. First, regarding the initial capital. According to him, PT PTPN VIII’s plan to provide additional capital in the form of lands in Walini in West Java was rejected by the consortium. “PTPN VIII was planning to increase the capital in the form of lands in Walini. In its development, the consortium KCIC does not receive contribution in the form of lands, only cash. PTPN VIII does not have the capability to provide cash of that amount,” Kartika Warjoatmodjo, familiarly called Tiko, said. Besides that, he continued that Jasa Marga was also planning to provide capital in the form of a right of way ROW on their toll roads. However, a ROW turns out can only be provided by the State Asset Directorate General of the Finance Ministry. “This misunderstanding on ROW is due to a lack of legal study at the early stage. Furthermore, capital from WIKA and KAI are also still lacking,” he said. To cover the lack of capital, Tiko continued that KAI was proposed to receive a state capital participation of trillion this year. The fund will be included in the 2021 additional PMN. “We expect that the culmination [of the lack of the capital from Jasa Marga and PTPN VIII] and the lack of the additional capital from WIKA and KAI can be provided by the PMN. The PMN through KAI that will be used to smooth out [the construction of] Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway is required as the companies are under pressure from the Covid-19 pandemic,” Tiko stated. Furthermore, Tiko said that the second issue regarding the Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway project was the cost overrun. In Tiko’s presentation during the working meeting with House of Representatives DPR Commission VI, it was shown that the cost overrun of Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway was estimated to reach around US$ billion to US$ billion. “We are currently having a discussion on the cost overrun. I think that it will not be provided in this year’s [PMN], but next year’s,” Tiko revealed previously. Then, he revealed that the third issue was the cash deficit. According to Tiko, discussions with China are still held to handle the negative operational cash flow, which will occur at the start of Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway’s operation. “We are thinking of a scheme with financing from a bank, which is CDB China Development Bank,” Tiko said. Special Staff for SOE Minister, Arya Sinulingga, previously explained that another problem was the change of Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway’s route to Jakarta-Padalarang-Bandung. This is set in Presidential Regulation Number 93 of 2021. Previously, the route was set to be Jakarta-Walini-Bandung. “Price changes can occur and are normal in a project. Moreover, in a project with a long route such as the Jakarta-Bandung High-Speed Railway project that spans 142 km. During construction, the design can change due to geological and geographical conditions that change from the original condition. Do not say that the original plan is wrong. Then, the price of lands can increase in time, which occurs during almost every construction,” he added. Contracts for rolling stock, systems, operation and maintenance as well as construction of the southern section of the line expected to be signed by the end of the Credit Metrolinx INFRASTRUCTURE Ontario and Metrolinx have selected the preferred consortia to deliver the rolling stock, systems, operation and maintenance RSSOM as well as the south section civils, stations and tunnel contracts for the Ontario Line metro in Toronto. The Ontario Line project is estimated to cost $C $US and is structured as a public-private partnership PPP, and will use a design-build-finance model. Connect 6ix is the preferred consortium for the RSSOM contract, which will provide a 30-year design-build-finance-operate-maintain contract for the entire Ontario Line. The group comprises Applicant lead Plenary Americas, Hitachi Rail, Webuild Group Salini Impreglio Canada Holding, Transdev CanadaDesign team Hitachi Rail, IBI Group Professional Services CanadaConstruction team Hitachi Rail, Webuild Group Astaldi Canada Design & Construction and Salini Impreglio Civil Works, NGE ContractingOperation, maintenance and rehabilitation team Hitachi Rail, Transdev Canada, andFinancial advisors National Bank Financial, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation. As part of its work, Hitachi Rail will design, supply and maintain the rolling stock for 30 years. In addition, the consortium will design, build, operate and maintain all track, communications and train control infrastructure and systems for the line, as well as design, build, operate and maintain the depot facility, the operation control centre and back-up operation control centre. NGE Group confirmed that it will supply and install the railway systems and build the depot in a joint venture with Hitachi and Webuild. Webuild says has a €450m stake in the joint venture responsible for the civil works and a 10% stake in Connect 6ix. South section contract Ontario Transit Group is the preferred consortium selected for the Ontario Line South contract, which involves a design-build-finance contract for the southern section of the line running from Exhibition/Ontario Place to the Don Yard portal, west of the Don River. The consortium consists of Applicant lead Ferrovial Construction Canada, Vinci Construction Grands ProjetsDesign team Aecom Canada, Cowi North America, GHD, Sener GroupConstruction team Ferrovial Construction Canada, Janin AtlasFinancial advisor Agentis Capital. The consortium will be responsible for excavating the 6km of tunnels as well as an above ground station that will integrate with the existing Go Transit Exhibition station, two underground stations to integrate with the existing Toronto Transit Commission TTC Osgoode and Queen metro stations, and four new stations at King/Bathurst, Queen/Spadna, Moss Park and Cooktown. The group will also oversee the groundworks required to build the tunnels and stations. Infrastructure Ontario and Metrolinx say both consortia ranked first in the evaluation of their respective request for proposals received in June 2022. Negotiations are continuing to finalise the contract ahead of awarding the contracts by the end of the year, the partners say. Procurement for the North civil major works, as well as enabling works for bridge, track and other preparatory activities, are set to follow. The Enabling Works Three package will include a new “iconic” bridge crossing the Don River Parkway and Don River. Construction on the new Exhibition station got underway earlier this year, effectively marking the start of construction on the Ontario Line, which will comprise 15 stations and will run from Exhibition Place in the west through the city centre to Ontario Science Centre in the northeast. There will be of dedicated track in existing rail corridors, of elevated track and underground. The line is expected to carry 388,000 passengers per day, with a peak frequency of a train every 90 seconds. Journey times are expected to take 40 minutes when the line opens in 2027, compared with the current 70 minutes. The Ontario Line is one of four shovel-ready public transport projects in the Greater Toronto Area GTA in which the Canadian and Ontario governments and the City of Toronto have agreed to invest a total of $C For detailed data on North American rail projects, subscribe to IRJ Pro. [1/2] An electric Multiple Unit high-speed train is seen during Hot Sliding Test in Tegalluar, Bandung, West Java province, Indonesia, May 19, 2023, in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Antara Foto/Raisan Al Farisi/via REUTERS JAKARTA, June 7 Reuters - Indonesia's transport ministry and three consultants have pushed back on a China-funded consortium's plan to start full commercial operations of the country's $ billion first high-speed train service in August, an internal document flagship project of President Joko Widodo - and part of China's Belt and Road Initiative BRI - the 142 km 88 miles line from capital Jakarta to the large city of Bandung being built by a consortium of Indonesian and Chinese state firms is already $ billion over the initial budget and four years behind smooth opening of the railway line, the most high-profile BRI project in Southeast Asia's largest economy, as part of Independence Day celebrations would be a shot in the arm for its ruling party ahead of a general election next year, analysts said."A further delay will only become ammunition for the opposition to attack," said Teuku Rezasyah, an international relations analyst at Padjadjaran University, adding that setbacks would taint China's credibility to develop and deliver big projects in the before its proposed commercial launch in August, the showpiece project is beset by fresh problems, with the consortium's Chinese participants wanting a full operational worthiness certificate for the line despite an incomplete station, a 48-page presentation reviewed by Reuters the transport ministry and consultants Mott MacDonald, PwC and local law firm Umbra have suggested that full-fledged commercial operations could start in January 2024, the "Progress Update" report dated May 14 shows."There is a risk that the target of commercial operations in August could be delayed to complete all construction by December 31," said the report, written in the local restructuring at PT Wijaya Karya Tbk WIKA - an Indonesian state-owned construction firm with an indirect minority stake in the consortium - is also hitting the working capital needs of the project, which has already accumulated at least $ million in outstanding payments, another internal document corporate secretary Mahendra Vijaya said the company had the financial capacity to finish the remaining work, but it also needed the consortium to pay it for work already is negotiating with China on an additional $560 million loan and asking for an interest rate of for the portion of the loan in yuan, which is lower than the China Development Bank CDB offer of according to a second set of documents dated May possibility of a further delay and other details in the two documents have not been previously Hario Seto, a senior official with the investment coordinating ministry, said debt negotiations were underway with CDB, focused on the interest railway plans to begin a free trial with passengers in mid-August, with paid trips expected in September and the incomplete station likely finished by November, he embassy in Jakarta directed questions on the date of operation and the issuance of certificate to the Indonesian government."Currently, the project is undergoing integrated test and commissioning," an embassy spokesperson said on declined to comment. China-backed consortium PT KCIC, Mott MacDonald, Umbra, CDB did not respond to requests for AND DOUBTSThe fresh loan is needed to help cover a $ billion cost KCIC was awarded the project in 2015 after lodging a cheaper proposal than a Japanese rival, with completion expected in 2019. But the project has been plagued by delays due to land ownership disputes, questions over its economic impact and the COVID-19 and cost blowouts are not uncommon in high-speed rail projects globally, including in Western KCIC expects it will take 40 years for its investment to become profitable, twice as long as initial estimates, an executive said last tickets on the line will cost up to 350,000 rupiah $ depending on the distance travelled, according to PT KCIC, nearly a quarter of the average Indonesian's weekly planned 45-minute train ride between Jakarta and Bandung compares with a car journey of two to three hours or the current three-hour rail with the terminal stations located outside the city centres, the high-speed rail line could struggle to attract the business passengers being targeted, said Sutanto Soehodho, a transportation analyst at the University of Indonesia."They value time and seek convenience," he said. "But if they need to transit again, why should they use it?"Locating the stations in central Jakarta and Bandung would have been too costly, ministry official Seto said.$1 = 14, rupiahReporting by Stefanno Sulaiman; Writing by Devjyot Ghoshal; Editing by Jamie FreedOur Standards The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. Skip Nav Destination Article navigation PROCEEDINGS OF THE 3RD INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONSTRUCTION AND BUILDING ENGINEERING ICONBUILD 2017 Smart Construction Towards Global Challenges14–17 August 2017Palembang, Indonesia Previous Article Next Article Research Article November 14 2017 Aleksander Purba; 1Civil Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Lampung University, Jalan Sumantri Brojonegoro No 1 Gedung Meneng, Bandar Lampung 35145, Indonesia Search for other works by this author on Fumihiko Nakamura; 2Graduate School of Urban Innovation, Yokohama National University, 79-1 Tokiwadai, Hodogaya-ku, Yokohama 240-8501, Japan Search for other works by this author on Chatarina Niken DWSBU; 3Civil Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Lampung University, Jalan Sumantri Brojonegoro No 1 Gedung Meneng, Bandar Lampung 35145, Indonesia Search for other works by this author on Muhammad Jafri; 4Civil Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Lampung University, Jalan Sumantri Brojonegoro No 1 Gedung Meneng, Bandar Lampung 35145, Indonesia Search for other works by this author on Priyo Pratomo 5Civil Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Lampung University, Jalan Sumantri Brojonegoro No 1 Gedung Meneng, Bandar Lampung 35145, Indonesia Search for other works by this author on AIP Conference Proceedings 1903, 060004 2017 Split-Screen Views Icon Views Article contents Figures & tables Video Audio Supplementary Data Peer Review Open the PDF for in another window Tools Icon Tools Search Site High-Speed Railways HSR is currently regarded as one of the most significant technological breakthroughs in passenger transportation developed in the second half of the 20th century. At the beginning of 2008, there were about 10,000 kilometers of new high-speed lines in operation in Asia and Europe regions to provide high-speed services to passengers willing to pay for lower travel time and quality improvement in rail transport. And since 2010, HSR itself has received a great deal of attention in Indonesia. Some transportation analysts contend that Indonesia, particularly Java and Sumatera islands need a high-speed rail network to be economically competitive with countries in Asia and Europe. On April 2016, Indonesia-China consortium Kereta Cepat Indonesia China KCIC signed an engineering, procurement, and construction contract to build the HSR with a consortium of seven companies called the High-Speed Railway Contractor Consortium. The HSR is expected to debut by May 2019, offering a 45-minute trip covering a roughly 150 km route. However, building, maintaining and operating HSR line is expensive; it involves a significant amount of sunk costs and may substantially compromise both the transport policy of a country and the development of its transport sector for decades. The main objective of this paper is to discuss some characteristics of the HSR services from an economic viewpoint, while simultaneously developing an empirical framework that should help us to understand, in more detail, the factors determining the success of the HSR as transport alternative based on current experiences of selected Asian and European countries. REFERENCES de Rus, Economic evaluation of the high-speed rail, University Carlos III de Madrid, pp. 2–3, 2012. Campos, G. de Rus and I. Barron, Economic analysis of high speed rail in Europe Fundacion BBVA, 2009. Levinson, Mathieu, D. Gillen and A. Kanafani, The annals of regional science, 31, pp. 212–213, 1997. de Rus and G. Nombela, Journal of transport economy and policy, 411, pp. 3–23 2007. de Rus and Working paper 590, Institute for Transportation Studies, University of Leeds, 2007. A. Nash, Enhancing the cost benefit analysis of high-speed rail Paper given at the symposium on the environmental and other co-benefits of developing a high-speed rail network in Berkeley California, 2010. Hirota, Japan the Shinkansen effects, Transports, 310, pp. 678–679, 1985. Nakamura and T. Ueda, Proceeding of Fifth World Conference on Transport Research, 3, Yokohama, Japan, 1989 pp. 95– G. Cho and J. K. Chung, Korea Research Institute for Human Settlements, Special Report 12, pp. 7–13, 2008. Korea Transport Institute KOTI, Modularization of Korea’s Development Experience Construction of high-speed rail in Korea Ministry of Strategy and Finance, Republic of Korea, 2012. Shima, Japan Railway and Transport Review, pp. 40-46, 2007. Barrow, International Railway Journal 2015. Ollivier, J. Sondhi and N. Zhou, China Transport Topics No. 9, pp. 1–2, 2014. Lou and A. Gui, Morgan Stanley Research, pp. 4-10, 2011. Commission EU, High-Speed Europe A sustainable link between citizens Report by Directorate-General for Mobility and Transport, Luxembourg, 2010. presentation at TEMPO conference 18-19 May Oslo, 2010. Vickerman, The Annals of Regional Science 31, pp. 21–38, 1997. Leheis, High-Speed train planning in France, lessons from Mediterranean TGV-line World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology 20, 2009. International high-speed railway system summary, Spain, pp. 1–2, 2010. high-speed railway system summary, Germany, pp. 1-4, 2010. Galenson and Associates TGA, High Speed Rail Passenger Services World Experience and Applications, 2011. Patuelli, International research society for public management conference, University of Birmingham, pp. 6-8, 2015. dello Stato Italiane, Piano industriale 2014-2017. Italian Railways, Business plan 2014-2017, 2013. p. Commission, EU transport in figures Statistical pocketbook, 2014. This content is only available via PDF. © 2017 Authors.2017Authors

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