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Transport in Lithuania relies mainly on road and rail networks.

Lithuanian road system[edit]

E-roads in Lithuania

(2018):
total: 21,238 kilometres (13,197 mi)
paved: 14,879 km (9,245 mi)
unpaved: 6,359 km (3,951 mi)

Highways[edit]

Controlled-access highways sections[edit]

There are two categories of controlled-access highways in Lithuania: expressways (Lithuanian: greitkeliai) with maximum speed 120 km/h and motorways (Lithuanian: automagistralės) with maximum speed 130 km/h.

Motorway sections[edit]

Expressway sections[edit]

A road system[edit]

The A roads (Magistraliniai keliai) total 1,748.84 km (1,086.68 mi).

Major highway projects in Interwar Lithuania[edit]

Before World War I, there were few isolated routes suitable for transit traffic e.g. present-day A12 highway, connecting Riga with Kaliningrad, or present day A6 highway which was part of highway Warsaw-Saint Petersburg that ran through Kaunas. After Lithuania becoming an independent country in 1918, there was increased demand for new highways for inner needs. First long-distance highways built exclusively by Lithuanian Government were opened in late 1930s. These are following:

Museum[edit]

Railways[edit]

Lithuanian Railways passenger train decorated with coat of arms Vytis
Railway station in Vilnius

There is a total of 1,998 route km of railways, of which:

  • 1,807 km are broad gauge of 1,520 mm (4 ft 11+2732 in) – 122 km of which are electrified
  • 169 km are narrow gauge of 750 mm (2 ft 5+12 in) – as of 2001
  • 22 km are standard gauge of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)

Rail links with adjacent countries[edit]

Waterways[edit]

There are 600 kilometres (370 mi) that are perennially navigable.

Pipelines[edit]

In 1992, there were 105 km (65 mi) of crude oil pipelines, and 760 km (470 mi) of natural gas pipelines.

Ports and harbours[edit]

Sea ports[edit]

Klaipėda port

River ports[edit]

Merchant marine[edit]

The merchant marine consists of 47 ships of 1,000 GT or over, together totaling 279,743 GT/304,156 tonnes deadweight (DWT).

Ships by type: Cargo 25, Combination bulk 8, Petroleum tanker 2, Railcar carrier 1, Refrigerated cargo 6, Roll on/roll off 2, Short-sea passenger 3.

Note: These totals include some foreign-owned ships registered here as a flag of convenience: Denmark 13 (2002 est.)

Airports[edit]

Vilnius International Airport

In Lithuania, there are four international airports:

External links[edit]

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