Early plans and start of construction The route of the present-day BAM first came under consideration in the 1880s as an option for the eastern section of the planned Trans-Siberian railway. In the 1930s,
labor-camp inmates, in particular from the
Bamlag camp of the
Gulag system, built the section from Tayshet to
Bratsk. In a confusing transfer of names, the label
BAM applied from 1933 to 1935 to the project to double-track the Trans-Siberian east of Lake Baikal, constructed largely using forced labor. 1945 saw the finalisation of plans for upgrading the BAM for diesel or electric instead of steam traction, and for the heavier axle-loads of eight-axle oil tankers to carry new-found oil from Western Siberia. The upgrading required 25 years and 3,000 surveyors and designers, although much of the redesign work (particularly as regards the central section) took place between 1967 and 1974. The BAM was again declared complete in 1991. By then, the total cost to build the line was
US$14
billion (
RU₽106
trillion).
Crisis Beginning in the mid-1980s, the BAM project attracted increasing criticism for having been poorly planned. Infrastructure and basic services like running water were often not in place when workers arrived. At least 60
boomtowns developed along the route, but today many of these places are deserted
ghost towns and unemployment in the area is high. The building of the BAM has also been criticised for its complete lack of environmental protection. When the
Soviet Union was dissolved, numerous mining and industrial projects in the region were cancelled and the BAM was greatly underutilized until the late 1990s, running at a large operational deficit. In 1996, the BAM as a single operational body was dissolved, with the western section from
Tayshet to
Khani becoming the
East Siberian Railway and the rest transferred to the management of the
Far Eastern Railway. During the
Russo-Ukrainian War, on November 30, 2023, an explosion occurred in the
Severomuysky Tunnel. A second explosion happened soon thereafter on the bypass used as backup for the tunnel. The
Security Service of Ukraine claimed responsibility for the explosions. ==Current situation and future prospects==