Panama monorail line to be financed by Japan

Written by Jenifer Nunez, assistant editor
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A monorail system like the one above might be used to help congestion on New Jersey’s Garden State Parkway.

The Republic of Panama has signed an agreement with the Japanese government valued at US$2.6 billion to fund the construction of Line 3 of Panama's Metro, the largest project in Panama since the expansion of the Panama Canal. The monorail system will be the first to use Japanese technology in the Americas.

 

The agreement, in addition to funding the Metro construction, will include non-refundable technical cooperation up to US$350,000 to hire a project manager.

“The funding granted today by Japan is a recognition of Panama’s credibility, stability and strength,” Panama President Juan Carlos Varela said. “Today’s announcement proves that our economy is sustained by solid foundations. This is a great project. It will benefit hundreds of thousands of Panamanians that have to commute every day to the west side of Panama City and will allow us to showcase Japanese technology to everyone in the region.”

President Varela and Japan Prime Minister Japan Shinzo Abe were witnesses to the exchange of notes and documentation between the Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA) on behalf of the Japanese government and Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Luis Miguel Hincapie, Minister of Economy and Finance Dulcidio De La Guardia and President of the Metro Roberto Roy on behalf of the government of Panama.

The funding granted by JICA is a loan with soft financial terms and conditions. It has a 20-year term, which includes 14 years of amortization, six years of grace period and three years for disbursement.

The project manager will support the Metro of Panama in the implementation of the project for Line 3, overseeing the preliminary design of Line 3 and together with the team from Metro of Panama developing the conditions for the public bidding for the construction and supervising the bidding and the evaluation of the proposal. Additionally, the project manager will manage the overall execution of Project Line 3, including the integration of the monorail system with the fourth bridge over the Panama Canal.

The company that will execute the project will be chosen through a process of international public bidding.

Line 3 of the Panama Metro will be 26.75 kilometers (17 miles) long with 14 passenger stations. The line starts with a connection with Line 1 in Albrook station before heading to the Balboa area and crossing the Canal over the superstructure of the fourth bridge, running beside the Pan-American Road before heading to the Special Economic Zone Panama Pacific and continuing through the center of Arraijan City.

From Arraijan, it continues through the Pan-American Road with a few stops before the end in Ciudad del Futuro, where the line will have its maintenance and storage facilities. The first phase of Project Line 3 will be built to facilitate phase two which will reach La Chorrera.

The first phase of Line 3 will meet the demand of 20,000 daily commuters in rush hour in 2020. With the second phase, Line 3 will benefit 31,862 commuters in 2050. The project will begin in 2017 and its operations are estimated to begin in the end of 2021.

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