Skip to main content

Turkey plans major infrastructure improvements

Turkey recently unveiled ambitious targets towards improving its transportation infrastructure for 2023, the year the country will celebrate its 100th year anniversary as Republic of Turkey. The main means of transportation in Turkey is by highways, and the coach and bus industry has played a crucial role in passenger transportation. The recent increases in the number of airports and charter companies have made travel by plane a potential choice for passengers. However, railways have contributed rather insi
May 3, 2012 Read time: 2 mins

Turkey recently unveiled ambitious targets towards improving its transportation infrastructure for 2023, the year the country will celebrate its 100th year anniversary as Republic of Turkey.

The main means of transportation in Turkey is by highways, and the coach and bus industry has played a crucial role in passenger transportation.

The recent increases in the number of airports and charter companies have made travel by plane a potential choice for passengers. However, railways have contributed rather insignificantly to passenger and freight transportation due to the insufficient and inefficient infrastructure in place.

This, in turn, also affects the efficiency of import/export to/from the country, which is emphasised as one of the biggest threats to the country’s growing economy.
This was discussed at the recent Turkey Transport Infrastructure 2011 held in Istanbul.

Additionally, through such high targets together with the newly announced/launched railway, highway, metro, tunnel projects, Turkey aims to improve the living standard in the cities by decreasing the level of intra-city congestion.

Turkey Transportation Infrastructure 2011 covered key topics surrounding the railway and highway infrastructure in Turkey including grand transportation projects such as 7Hill/7Tunnel for Istanbul; high-speed train construction between Istanbul-Konya-Ankara, and the 3rd Bosphorus Bridge.

The finance resources for such projects were discussed, while the importance of transportation infrastructure for freight transportation was emphasised.

Technical discussions covered various analysis carried out during both national and international projects, and transportation projects initiated by various metropolitan municipalities were presented to showcase successful ongoing/completed projects, and future collaboration with private sector and universities.

FACTS                                                                        2023 TARGETS
 Total vehicle (2001/2009)   7,342,888 / 12,914,564*  
 Total Road network  64865km** 5436km (to be constructed)**
 Total Motorway      2080**  
 5436km (to be constructed)**
 Total Conventional Railway
 11052km***  4707km (to be constructed)****
 Total Electrified railway 2273km***  8717km (to be constructed****
  Total High Speed railway  888km***  6792km (to be constructed)****
  Freight Transportation (road)  95%*  
  Freight Transportation (rail)  3.5%*  20%**** 
  Passenger  Transportation(road)  
 95% highway*  
  Passenger Transportation(rail)     3% highway*  15%****







*TURKSTAT Road Motor Vehicle Statistics ** General Directorate of State Highways (01/2011)  *** General Directorate of Railways (12/2010) ****10th Turkey Transportation Summit (05/2011)

Related Content

  • Sweden to need 1,200 EV truck stations by 2030
    July 16, 2021
    Power Circle, along with Dansk Elbil Alliance and IUC SYD, has set up the ScandELivery project to help the electrification of heavy and light goods vehicles.
  • More studies for the Great Istanbul Tunnel under the Bosporus
    March 11, 2019
    Work has started on a geological condition field study for a proposed 6.5km three-deck road and rail tunnel under the Bosporus Strait in Istanbul, Turkey. Average daily road traffic through the Great Istanbul Tunnel is expected to be 120,000 vehicles and the rail line will move around 75,000 people daily. The tunnel, announced in 2015, will be nearly 19m in diameter and have two road levels and one rail level. It will run between Gayrettepe on the European side and Küçüksu on the Asian side. The ci
  • Kenya rehabilitates, widens, tolls Northern Corridor
    November 8, 2017
    A massive highway project in Kenya will boost transport for the country as well as its neighbours - Shem Oirere reports. Kenya has commenced the process of rehabilitating, expanding and tolling of 657km of East Africa’s Northern Corridor that is anchored on the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa and which links the gateway with landlocked countries of Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and parts of eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).
  • Moldova gets EBRD loan for M1, M2 upgrades
    August 28, 2023
    The work will enhance transport connectivity by strengthening core transport links with a focus on the pan-European TEN-T network.