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what

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If they keep what they say, its going to be good for the country but will be painful for a while. I really hope they realized how bad the situation is and will fix things now.
 

Zafer

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Its so dissapointing our money lost this much value in just 2 months.
We just won a war in those two months. And made a peace agreement that enables us to make roads to Azerbaijan. That agreement should also have some effect on the balancing of markets. Don't you think.
 

uzaysan

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We just won a war in those two months. And made a peace agreement that enables us to make roads to Azerbaijan. That agreement should also have some effect on the balancing of markets. Don't you think.
if you really think our money lost value because of war, i have nothing to say to you. But let me ask. Why did lira gain value after resignation of berat albayrak if reason was war?
 
S

Sinan

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We have a good proverb. "Lafla peynir gemisi yürümez"...unless government makes some structural changes Turkish economy will continue to go downwards.
 
T

Turko

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We just won a war in those two months. And made a peace agreement that enables us to make roads to Azerbaijan. That agreement should also have some effect on the balancing of markets. Don't you think.
İ don't think Azerbaidjanes would share their victory with Turkey. On internet i haven't met any news Türkiye defeated Armenia. Victory to Azerbaidjanes martyrs.
 

Zafer

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İ don't think Azerbaidjanes would share their victory with Turkey. On internet i haven't met any news Türkiye defeated Armenia. Victory to Azerbaidjanes martyrs.
It is not a full victory on the account of Turkey but the side we supported won so we can celebrate. Probably you haven't seen reactions of some citizens and I don't want to repeat them here. It is the same kind of reaction Qataris have made.
 

Glass🚬

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Turkey to boost railway investments, directly connecting industrial zones to port cities
71744.jpg

Container vessel loading and discharging operations at the Mersin International Port, Mersin, Turkey, Sept. 18, 2018. (iStock Photo by Can Aran)
BY DAILY SABAHNOV 12, 2020 3:56 PM
Turkey is set to mobilize its investments in railway infrastructure, and new lines have been included on the country’s agenda, including those that will directly connect industrial production zones to commercial ports, Infrastructure and Transport Minister Adil Karaismailoğlu said Thursday.

He said that they are planning their railway networks according to feasibility studies and that the country will be a logistics superpower when setting up the infrastructure with the new investments.

Karaismailoğlu was speaking to Anadolu Agency's (AA) Editorial Desk about the country’s current railway infrastructure, plans and new investments.

He said that the country has achieved a lot in the last 18 years in the field of transportation.

“We have increased the length of divided roads from 6,000 kilometers to up to 28,000 kilometers,” Karaismailoğlu said, adding that in 2002, there were only 50 kilometers (31 miles) of tunnels in Turkey. "We currently have a 600-kilometer tunnel and a 200-kilometer tunnel network under construction," he said.

“Our road network has now reached a certain level,” Karaismailoğlu said, adding that thus it is time to focus on the railways.

Karaismailoğlu said that Turkey had nearly 9,000 kilometers of railway in the 1930s however, from the 1940s to 2002, there was no real investment in railway infrastructure. He said that this changed under the leadership of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as the country has been accelerating its efforts to increase railway capacity in recent years.

Commenting on the modernized Samsun-Sivas line, which just recently opened with a ceremony attended by Erdoğan, Karaismailoğlu said the line connects the Black Sea to the central Anatolian region and then to the Mediterranean. The 431-kilometer railway line which is now operating at increased capacity will also contribute to the trade corridor from Northern Europe to the Middle East.

Turkey is located on a corridor that reaches from Beijing to London, Karaismailoğlu said.

Railway for industrialists

The minister said there are new railway lines that have been included in the country’s future plans, and some of the most important ones are those that will connect Organized Industrial Zones (OIZ) to ports. These railways will provide timely, cost-effective transportation for industrial products on their way to commercial ports, making Turkey's industrialists a direct part of global trade.

The minister said their plans include industrial production zones near Iskenderun Port in southern Turkey’s Hatay province, Mersin Port in southern Mersin province, Filyos Port in northern Zonguldak province and Alsancak Port and soon-to-be opened Çandarlı Port in western Izmir.

“We aim to reduce the costs of 50% in logistics to less than 10%,” he added.

Stating that they aim to increase the annual amount of 30 million tons of freight transported by rail to 45 million tons by 2023 and 150 million tons by 2028, Karaismailoğlu noted that there are investment works related to the Divriği-Kars line, which is one of the main parts of the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars line.

"We aim to increase the capacity there to 20 million tons from 5 million tons," he said.

There are also plans for a line that will cross Nakhchivan following the recent developments in Azerbaijan, the minister said.

Karaismailoğlu stated that work continues on high-speed train lines as well as freight transportation.

"The Mersin-Adana-Gaziantep line is very important" in order for southeastern Gaziantep province to have a connection to the sea, he said.

Karaismailoğlu said that currently 70% of customers prefer railway transportation between the capital Ankara and central Konya province because it is both comfortable and cost-effective.

There is also the Istanbul-Ankara express train project, he said, for which plans have been temporarily suspended due to the coronavirus outbreak.

He noted that Turkey Railway Machines Industry Railway Technology Inc. (TÜDEMSAŞ), Turkey Locomotive and Engine Industry Inc. (TÜLOMSAŞ) and Turkey Wagon Industry AŞ (TÜVASAŞ) have jointly established a new brand, Turkey Rail System Tools Industries Inc. (TÜRASAŞ), and that the production of high-speed trains will be carried out under the scope of this brand.

Space ventures

Commenting on the space initiatives, Karaismailoğlu said the Türksat 5A satellite will be launched into space by mid-December and the Türksat 5B is planned for June 2021.

“With 5B, the internet speed will increase to 56 gigabytes,” he said.

“The 6A satellite, which is the most important example of developments in domestic and national technologies, is under construction,” and the country will launch it into space by the beginning of 2022, Karaismailoğlu said. “Thus, we will be using our own technologies in space,” he added.

 

Saithan

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Turkey to boost railway investments, directly connecting industrial zones to port cities
71744.jpg

Container vessel loading and discharging operations at the Mersin International Port, Mersin, Turkey, Sept. 18, 2018. (iStock Photo by Can Aran)
BY DAILY SABAHNOV 12, 2020 3:56 PM
Turkey is set to mobilize its investments in railway infrastructure, and new lines have been included on the country’s agenda, including those that will directly connect industrial production zones to commercial ports, Infrastructure and Transport Minister Adil Karaismailoğlu said Thursday.

He said that they are planning their railway networks according to feasibility studies and that the country will be a logistics superpower when setting up the infrastructure with the new investments.

Karaismailoğlu was speaking to Anadolu Agency's (AA) Editorial Desk about the country’s current railway infrastructure, plans and new investments.

He said that the country has achieved a lot in the last 18 years in the field of transportation.

“We have increased the length of divided roads from 6,000 kilometers to up to 28,000 kilometers,” Karaismailoğlu said, adding that in 2002, there were only 50 kilometers (31 miles) of tunnels in Turkey. "We currently have a 600-kilometer tunnel and a 200-kilometer tunnel network under construction," he said.

“Our road network has now reached a certain level,” Karaismailoğlu said, adding that thus it is time to focus on the railways.

Karaismailoğlu said that Turkey had nearly 9,000 kilometers of railway in the 1930s however, from the 1940s to 2002, there was no real investment in railway infrastructure. He said that this changed under the leadership of President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan as the country has been accelerating its efforts to increase railway capacity in recent years.

Commenting on the modernized Samsun-Sivas line, which just recently opened with a ceremony attended by Erdoğan, Karaismailoğlu said the line connects the Black Sea to the central Anatolian region and then to the Mediterranean. The 431-kilometer railway line which is now operating at increased capacity will also contribute to the trade corridor from Northern Europe to the Middle East.

Turkey is located on a corridor that reaches from Beijing to London, Karaismailoğlu said.

Railway for industrialists

The minister said there are new railway lines that have been included in the country’s future plans, and some of the most important ones are those that will connect Organized Industrial Zones (OIZ) to ports. These railways will provide timely, cost-effective transportation for industrial products on their way to commercial ports, making Turkey's industrialists a direct part of global trade.

The minister said their plans include industrial production zones near Iskenderun Port in southern Turkey’s Hatay province, Mersin Port in southern Mersin province, Filyos Port in northern Zonguldak province and Alsancak Port and soon-to-be opened Çandarlı Port in western Izmir.

“We aim to reduce the costs of 50% in logistics to less than 10%,” he added.

Stating that they aim to increase the annual amount of 30 million tons of freight transported by rail to 45 million tons by 2023 and 150 million tons by 2028, Karaismailoğlu noted that there are investment works related to the Divriği-Kars line, which is one of the main parts of the Baku-Tbilisi-Kars line.

"We aim to increase the capacity there to 20 million tons from 5 million tons," he said.

There are also plans for a line that will cross Nakhchivan following the recent developments in Azerbaijan, the minister said.

Karaismailoğlu stated that work continues on high-speed train lines as well as freight transportation.

"The Mersin-Adana-Gaziantep line is very important" in order for southeastern Gaziantep province to have a connection to the sea, he said.

Karaismailoğlu said that currently 70% of customers prefer railway transportation between the capital Ankara and central Konya province because it is both comfortable and cost-effective.

There is also the Istanbul-Ankara express train project, he said, for which plans have been temporarily suspended due to the coronavirus outbreak.

He noted that Turkey Railway Machines Industry Railway Technology Inc. (TÜDEMSAŞ), Turkey Locomotive and Engine Industry Inc. (TÜLOMSAŞ) and Turkey Wagon Industry AŞ (TÜVASAŞ) have jointly established a new brand, Turkey Rail System Tools Industries Inc. (TÜRASAŞ), and that the production of high-speed trains will be carried out under the scope of this brand.

Space ventures

Commenting on the space initiatives, Karaismailoğlu said the Türksat 5A satellite will be launched into space by mid-December and the Türksat 5B is planned for June 2021.

“With 5B, the internet speed will increase to 56 gigabytes,” he said.

“The 6A satellite, which is the most important example of developments in domestic and national technologies, is under construction,” and the country will launch it into space by the beginning of 2022, Karaismailoğlu said. “Thus, we will be using our own technologies in space,” he added.

I wonder why past goverments never invested in rails, we’re the economy that bad?
 

Glass🚬

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I wonder why past goverments never invested in rails, we’re the economy that bad?
This export-oriented economic Model is Just a few years old and now where the Exports are growing they See the urge to Provide more and efficient transport models for customers.
 

Deliorman

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Railroad is very good for economy

It started to worsen in 1950s

We completely become depended on automobiles and oil.

"Tren komünist işi" was one of the excuses

That’s such an idiotic statement. You can’t have widespread industrialization and movement of goods and resources on land without mass investments in railways. Highways might be faster but it’s one thing to fill one truck with let’s say grains and completely different thing to send a whole train.

When Germany started its mass industrialization after it’s unification in the 1870s they expanded their railways by the speed of light. In a few decades they were an economic and military superpower that was challenging Britain. The same thing happened in Japan and in absolutely every other country that ever became an industrial power.

Our only problem is that Turkey’s terrain in very harsh and railway building always is more expensive and harder than it would if Turkey was mostly flat.
 

Saithan

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That’s such an idiotic statement. You can’t have widespread industrialization and movement of goods and resources on land without mass investments in railways. Highways might be faster but it’s one thing to fill one truck with let’s say grains and completely different thing to send a whole train.

When Germany started its mass industrialization after it’s unification in the 1870s they expanded their railways by the speed of light. In a few decades they were an economic and military superpower that was challenging Britain. The same thing happened in Japan and in absolutely every other country that ever became an industrial power.

Our only problem is that Turkey’s terrain in very harsh and railway building always is more expensive and harder than it would if Turkey was mostly flat.

Even if slow the work should have progressed.
 

Saithan

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what

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I like the rail-link between Turkey and Azerbaijan. It would be faster route than the existing route through Georgia.

If Armenia acted rationally we could add them to the rail network. We really need a change in attitude in the region. If Germany and France are best friends today, why can't we at least have some you know normal neighbourly relations.
 

Constan

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I like the rail-link between Turkey and Azerbaijan. It would be faster route than the existing route through Georgia.

If Armenia acted rationally we could add them to the rail network. We really need a change in attitude in the region. If Germany and France are best friends today, why can't we at least have some you know normal neighbourly relations.
This what should happen when a normal people are ruling the country. Yes why not to have a good relation with Armenia
 

Saithan

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Production seems to draw investors. Which is understandable. Germany made it work, so we should be able to as well.
 

Saithan

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Yürüüüüüüüüüü!

This is what's suppose to be on the agenda.


AKP trying to go back to pre 2011 policy and trying to prepare for Biden's term.

1605258710917.png
 
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