
Alstom will build 47 new diesel multiple-unit passenger trains for use on passenger routes under construction in Mexico, the company has announced.
The order of 33 long-haul and 14 short-haul trainsets will be built for the Mexico City-Querétaro-Irapuato and Saltillo-Monterrey-Nuevo Laredo corridors under a Dec. 15 decision by the Ministry of Infrastructure, Communications, and Transportation. The contract is valued at approximately 20.2 billion pesos ($1.13 billion), and also includes five years of maintenance, outfitting of maintenance, inspection, and fueling facilities, as well as technical training and commissioning of the trains.
The trains will be built at Alstom’s plant in Ciudad Sahagún in the Mexican state of Hidalgo, about 80 kilometers (50 miles) northeast of Mexico City.
“This project exemplifies Alstom’s commitment to Mexico,” Maite Ramos, Alstom’s general manager for the North Latin America region, said in a press release. Ramos noted that 76.6% of the train’s parts will be Mexican-made. “This level of local content boosts the Mexican railway industry, promotes technical specialization and strengthens the network of local suppliers, creating attractive jobs across the value chain. Manufacturing trains for Mexico, made in Mexico, isn’t about just one project; it is our long-term contribution to sustainable mobility and the development of the country.”
The four-car Adessia Stream trainsets will be capable of top speeds of 165 kilometers per hour (102.5 mph), and will allow two sets to be coupled together to create eight-car trains. The short-haul trains will have a capacity of up to 600, while the long-haul trains will seat about 300.
The Mexican government began construction of the 137-mile first phase of the route to Nuevo Laredo in November [see “Mexico begins work …,” Trains.com, Nov. 8, 2025]. Work had previously begun on the Mexico City-Irapuato project.
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