Due to the mountainous geography of Laos, the country had no substantial railway infrastructure, thus traditionally rail transport has not played a significant part in Laos's transport sector.
A short portage railway, the Don Det–Don Khon narrow gauge railway, was built by the French while Laos was a part of French Indochina. The railway crossed over the islands of Don Det and Don Khon, enabling vessels, freight and passengers to travel along the Mekong River, avoiding the Khone falls which prevented navigation.[1] The railway was abandoned in the 1940s and fell into ruin, although some remnants of the infrastructure are still in place.[2]
It was only after the 2009 opening of the railway link from Vientiane to Thailand, as well as the 2021 opening of the Boten–Vientiane railway, connecting Vientiane to major cities in northern Laos and across the Chinese border to Kunming, that rail transport came into prominence in Laos. The railways both lie on the major railway corridor of the Kunming–Singapore railway's central line, and are also a key developmental project in Laos's national goal to become a "land-linked" economy.[3][4]
As of November 2010, Lao officials plan to convert the station into a rail cargo terminal for freight trains, allowing cargo to be transported from Bangkok into Laos more cheaply than via road. The Vientiane Logistics Park opened in December 2021.[10] From 2009 to 2024, a shuttle train ran twice a day between Nong Khai railway station and Thanaleng station,[11][12] with occasional services by the Eastern and Oriental Express.
This rail link expanded closer to Vientiane city, with services to the new Khamsavath railway station in Vientiane Prefecture.[13] The station's inauguration ceremony took place on 31 October 2023.[14] The express train runs from Bangkok to Vientiane officially opened on 19 July 2024.
In July 2022, the Lao government announced a feasibility study into the Laos-Vietnam Railway Project. This would involve the construction of a rail line in two phases. The initial phase would connect Thakhek and Vũng Áng seaport in Vietnam, a distance of 139 kilometres. The second phase would connect Thakhek with Vientiane with a 312-kilometre rail line.[15]
Laos has a long history of negotiating with China regarding the possibility of a joint railway project.[16] After many years of delays and negotiations, by 2015, both countries had agreed upon a revised plan and would jointly finance and operate the railway under a build-operate-transfer arrangement.[17] Construction work worth US$1.2 billion was awarded to the China Railway Group in September 2015.[17]
The railway was planned to link the capital Vientiane with the town of Boten at the border with China. Construction began at Luang Prabang on 25 December 2016,[18] and the line was officially opened on 3 December 2021.[19][20] The cost of the project is estimated at US$5.965 billion[21] or RMB 37.425 billion.[22] The railway is 60% funded with debt financing ($3.6 billion) from the Export-Import Bank of China, and the remaining 40% ($2.4 billion) by a joint venture company between the two countries, in which China holds a 70% stake.[23]