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TRANSPORT IN SWEDEN

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'Transportation' in Sweden.

Contents
Railways
Trams, Light Rail and Metros
Railway links with adjacent countries
Road traffic
Highways
Ports and harbours
Merchant marine
Airports
Airports - with paved runways
Airports - with unpaved runways
List of airports
See also
References

Railways


Rail transport are operated by SJ, Green Cargo, TÃ¥gkompaniet and a number of regional companies.

★ Total: 12,821 km (includes 3,594 km of privately owned railways) or 9227 km of public railways

standard gauge: 12,821 km gauge (7,918 km electrified and 1,152 km double track) (1998)

narrow gauge: 221 km 0.891-m gauge (2001)
From Gällivare in the north to Kristinehamn in the centre of the country runs the Inland Railway which had been put into service in the beginning of the 20th century to develop the northern territories of Sweden. Now it serves mainly touristical and wood transportation purposes.
Trams, Light Rail and Metros

The most extensive network in Northern Europe has Gothenburg in Sweden (190 km on a total track length of 80 km; see Gothenburg tram), followed by the Norwegian capital Oslo. Norrköping, also Sweden, has a rather small but growing network.
Cities with Light Rail;

Gothenburg

Norrköping

Stockholm
Cities with Metro Systems;

Stockholm, Stockholm Metro
Railway links with adjacent countries


Norway - yes - same gauge - same voltage

Finland - yes - break-of-gauge 1435mm/1524mm

Denmark - yes - Oresund bridge - same gauge - voltage change 15kVAC/25kVAC.

Road traffic


''See also: Driving on the left or right''
Stockholm on "Dagen H"

Sweden had left-hand traffic (''Vänstertrafik'' in Swedish) from approximately 1736 and continued to do so well into the 20th century. Despite this virtually all cars in Sweden were actually left-hand drive and the neighbouring Nordic countries already drove on the right, leading to some confusion at border crossings. The Swedish voters rejected a change to driving on the right in a referendum held in 1955.
Nevertheless, in 1963 the Riksdag passed legislation ordering the switch to right-hand traffic. The changeover took place on a Sunday morning at 5am on September 3, 1967, which was known in Swedish as ''Dagen H'' (H-Day), the 'H' being for ''Högertrafik'' or right-hand traffic.
Since Swedish cars were left-hand drive, experts had suggested that changing to driving on the right would reduce accidents, because drivers would have a better view of the road ahead. Indeed, fatal car-to-car and car-to-pedestrian accidents did drop sharply as a result.
Highways

Motorways run through Sweden, Denmark and over the Öresund Bridge to Stockholm, Gothenburg, Uppsala and Uddevalla. The system of motorways is still under construction and a new motorway from Uppsala to Gävle is under construction.

★ total: 210,760 km

★ paved: 162,707 km (including 1,428 km of expressways)

★ unpaved: 48,053 km (1999)

★ Waterways: 2,052 km

★ note: navigable for small steamers and barges

Ports and harbours



Gothenburg

Gävle

Halmstad

Helsingborg

Hudiksvall

Kalmar

Kapellskär

Karlshamn

Malmö

Norrköping

Stockholm

Sundsvall

Sölvesborg

Varberg

Västerås

Merchant marine



★ total: 167 ships (1,000 GRT or over) totaling 2,205,370 GRT/1,663,091 DWT

★ ships by type: (2000 est.)


★ bulk 5


★ cargo 28


★ chemical tanker 31


★ combination ore/oil 4


★ liquified gas 1


★ petroleum tanker 29


★ railcar carrier 1


★ roll-on/roll-off 40


★ short-sea passenger 4


★ specialized tanker 6


★ vehicle carrier 17

Airports


''See also: Swedish Civil Aviation Administration''

★ 255 (2000 estimate)
Airports - with paved runways

(Official figures. A great number of wartime airfields exist with various lengths)


★ total: 147


★ over 3,047 m: 3


★ 2,438 to 3,047 m: 11


★ 1,524 to 2,437 m: 80


★ 914 to 1,523 m: 28


★ under 914 m: 25
Airports - with unpaved runways



★ total: 108


★ 914 to 1,523 m: 5


★ under 914 m: 103

★ Heliports


★ 1 (2000 est.) (Every hospital, airport and military base has Helipads.)
List of airports


Gothenburg City Airport

Gothenburg-Landvetter Airport

Kalmar Airport

Malmö-Sturup Airport

Stockholm-Arlanda Airport

Stockholm-Bromma Airport

Stockholm-Skavsta Airport

See also



Sweden

Government agencies in Sweden

Scandinavian Airlines System

Volvo, Saab Automobile, Saab, Scania

Estonia disaster

References



CIA World Factbook 2001

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