Sines could get passenger trains back, 36 years on
Infraestruturas de Portugal is studying a new mixed-traffic line that would bring Sines closer to Lisbon. The town hasn't seen passenger trains since 1990.
Anyone from Sines knows the story by heart: the station is still there, the tracks too, but nobody’s caught a passenger train since 1990. That’s 36 years. Now there’s a study that could change it — slowly, and with plenty of “ifs” along the way.
What’s on the table
Infraestruturas de Portugal is looking at a new rail link designed mainly to shorten the distance between Sines and Lisbon. The detail that matters to locals: the study allows for mixed traffic, meaning the door is open to passenger trains, not just the freight that serves the port.
Best not to pop the champagne yet. The government has no plans to revive passenger service on the current Sines Line. The possibility lives in this new route under study — an early stage, with no firm dates and no guarantees.
The context that helps
Sines isn’t just any dot on the rail map: its port is a key piece of the economy, and the region has been gaining weight. In parallel, the municipality has launched a tender for a new Mobility Station, a 3.5-million-euro investment next to the old railway station — a sign the transport push isn’t just talk.
There’s movement on the southern network too: the link between Évora and Spain is expected to start carrying trains in early 2027, with testing and certification under way.
Why it matters
For people who live and work in the area, a passenger train would be more than comfort — it’d mean fewer cars on the road and a better connection to the rest of the country. For now it’s the promise of a study. But sometimes that’s exactly how these things start.
Illustrative · Photo: Magda Ehlers / Pexels