Title: The African-Built Giant: Why the Continent’s Biggest Train Was Never Chinese
When the world looks at Africa’s largest infrastructure projects, the assumption often points to China. Massive loans, Belt and Road initiatives, and gleaming new railways have cemented this narrative.
When the world looks at Africa’s largest infrastructure projects, the assumption often points to China. Massive loans, Belt and Road initiatives, and gleaming new railways have cemented this narrative. But one record-breaking machine challenges that story entirely: a locomotive built not in Beijing, but in South Africa. It is the most powerful train ever to operate on African soil, and its origins reveal a deeper, often overlooked history of industrial capability within the continent itself.
The locomotive in question is the E38 series, a fleet of electric heavy-haul trains manufactured by the South African company Transnet Engineering. Designed for the Sishen–Saldanha iron ore line—one of the longest and heaviest freight corridors on Earth—these machines generate over 10,000 horsepower. They pull trains nearly four kilometers long, carrying 41,000 tons of iron ore per trip. By comparison, most Chinese-built locomotives operating in Africa top out at roughly half that power.
The confusion is understandable. China has financed and built railways across Ethiopia, Kenya, and Nigeria. Its companies dominate the continent’s construction sector. But the E38 series was designed and assembled entirely in South Africa, using local engineering talent and components sourced from domestic suppliers. The first units entered service in 2012, a decade before China’s flagship African rail projects were completed.
Why does this matter? Because it dismantles a persistent myth: that Africa lacks the capacity to build heavy, high-technology machinery. The E38 proves that African engineers can design world-class rolling stock. It also highlights a strategic choice. South Africa chose to invest in its own industrial base rather than import foreign technology. The result is a train that not only moves ore but also sustains local jobs, skills, and supply chains.
The broader lesson is clear. When we discuss Africa’s future, we must move beyond the narrative of a passive recipient of foreign aid. The continent’s largest train is a testament to its own engineering prowess. It was never a Chinese product. It was always African.