El Salvador Transportation
Figure 7. Transportation System, 1988
El Salvador's transportation sector, which included
railroads, major highways, and air transport, connected the
country's major regions. Even though these systems were
extensive, the disruptions of the civil conflict made travel
dangerous and undependable.
El Salvador has had a fairly complete railroad system since
the early twentieth century. In 1987 there were 602 kilometers of
railroads in El Salvador. Over one-half of the tracks (380
kilometers) were owned by Salvador Railroads, which was built
with British capital in the late 1890s to transport coffee from
Sonsonate and Santa Ana to the port of Acajutla. By 1985 Salvador
Railways, which was nationalized in the mid-1960s, was forced to
curtail operations because of guerrilla attacks.
By 1980 the country had over 10,000 kilometers of roads, of
which some 1,500 were paved. The major arteries were the Pan
American Highway and the Carretera Litoral. The Pan American
Highway ran through Santa Ana, San Salvador, and San Miguel. The
Carretera Litoral ran mainly along the coast but also went
through Zacatecoluca and Usulutan. Road transportation was
periodically blocked by the guerrillas, who intermittently
controlled extensive eastern portions of both highways. For
example, during the October 1982 guerrilla offensive alone, more
than 100 vehicles were burned on the Pan American Highway.
Truckloads of soldiers were needed to convoy fuel trucks on the
highway between San Salvador and San Miguel. The transportation
stoppage reportedly caused a major gasoline shortage in San
Miguel, where motorists sometimes had to visit several service
stations in order to fill up their tanks. The guerrillas also
sabotaged the Litoral and Cuscatlan bridges, the two primary
routes across the Rio Lempa, one of El Salvador's most
significant geographic obstacles
(see
fig. 3).
The two major ports in El Salvador were Acajutla and La
Union, both large shipping ports with significant infrastructure
for fisheries. Ilopango International Airport, located near San
Salvador, was one of Central America's most modern airports, and
it was the only airport in the country suitable for jet aircraft.
El Salvador's only commercial airline, Central American Air
Transport (Transportes Aereos Centroamericanos--Taca), owned
seven commercial aircraft that provided service to Central
America, Mexico City, Miami, and Los Angeles. Nevertheless,
considering its size in the late 1980s, El Salvador had a large
number of airfields. Of the country's 138 airfields, 95 were
usable, but of these, only 5 were paved. Although noncombatant
crop dusters used most of the airfields, some were caught in the
crossfire of the civil conflict. One cotton cooperative reported
that one of its pilots had been killed and that two others had
been wounded by guerrilla snipers.
Data as of November 1988
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