Future of rail transport in India

The Indian government is undertaking several initiatives to upgrade its aging railway infrastructure and enhance its quality of service. The Railway Ministry has announced plans to invest 905,000 crore (US$127 billion) to upgrade the railways by 2020.[1] IR's Research Design and Standards Organisation (RDSO) undertakes all research, designs and standardisation work for modernisation.

Trains

High-speed rail

Feasibility studies for five high-speed rail corridors were conducted between 2009 and 2010. A "Diamond Quadrilateral" has been planned to connect Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai with a high-speed train network.[2] The Indian government conducted joint surveys with a Japanese government team in 2014, finally approving a corridor between Mumbai and Ahmedabad. The new high-speed service will use a Japanese Shinkansen system and locomotives. The cost of procuring the technology is estimated to be around 110,000 crore (US$15 billion). India and Japan signed agreements for the project in December 2015; the Japanese government will fund 81% of the total cost with a soft loan fixed at a nominal interest rate.[3] A special committee has recommended the trains be run on an elevated corridor for an additional cost of 10,000 crore (US$1 billion), to avoid the difficulties of acquiring land, building underpasses, and constructing protective fencing.[4] Indian Railways will operate the corridor for a five-year period after its commissioning, and afterwards will be turned over to a private operator.[5]

Construction work of the corridor began in 2017 and will be completed by 2022.[6]

Semi-high-speed rail

A semi-high-speed rail network will be introduced for connecting important routes, including Delhi-Agra, Delhi-Kanpur, Chennai-Hyderabad, Nagpur-Secunderabad, and Mumbai-Goa. Initially, the trains will operate at a maximum speed of 160 km/h, which will be increased to 200 km/h after the rails are strengthened and fenced off. The Gatimaan Express began services on April 5, 2016, after safety clearances were obtained on its first route.[2][7]

Conversion to high-speed passenger and freight corridors: 2027 target of 10,000 km

IR will convert 10,000 km passenger and freight trunk routes in to High-speed rail corridors of India over 10 years with total investment of 20,000,000 million (equivalent to 23 trillion or US$320 billion in 2019) and annual investment of 2,000,000 million (equivalent to 2.3 trillion or US$32 billion in 2019) from 2017-2027, where half of the money will be spent on converting exiting routes into high-speed corridors by leap-frogging the technology and the rest will be used to develop the stations and electronic signaling at the cost of 600,000 million (equivalent to 680 billion or US$9.5 billion in 2019) to enable automated running of trains at 5–6 minutes frequency. Dedicated freight corridors of 3,300 km length will also be completed thus freeing the dual use high demand trunk routes for running more high-speed passenger trains.[8]

Rolling Stock

Modern locomotive factories

In 2015, plans were disclosed for the construction of two locomotive factories with foreign partnerships in the state of Bihar, at Madhepura (electric), and at Marhowra(diesel). The diesel locomotive works will be jointly operated in a partnership with General Electric, which has invested 2,052 crore (US$288 million) for its construction, and the electric locomotive works with Alstom, which has invested 1,293.57 crore (US$181 million). The factories will provide IR with 800 electric locomotives of 12,000 horsepower and a mix of 1,000 diesel locomotives of 4,500 and 6,000 horsepower each.[9] In November 2015, it was announced IR and GE would engage in an 11-year joint venture in which GE would hold a majority stake of 74%. IR would purchase 100 goods locomotives a year for 10 years, beginning in 2017; the locomotives would be modified versions of the GE Evolution series.[10] The diesel locomotive works will be built by 2018; GE will import the first 100 locomotives and manufacture the remaining 900 in India from 2019 onwards, also assuming responsibility for their maintenance over a 13-year period.[11] In the same month, a 20,000 crore (US$3 billion) partnership with Alstom to supply 800 electric locomotives from 2018 to 2028 was announced.[1]

Indian Railways is now moving to manufacturing high-end aluminium self-propelled 160 km/hour indigenous Make in India coaches that require no locomotive and are 10% cheaper than the comparable imports. The first such self-propelled train, Train 18, was rolled out in October 2018. It is estimated to be 40% cheaper than foreign-built trains. By 2020 an even cheaper and lighter aluminum version is planned to follow.[12]

Railway coach refurbishment

Railway coach refurbishment project aims for the refurbishment of 12 to 15 years old coaches at Carriage Rehabilitation Workshop in Bhopal to enhance passenger amenities and fire safety measures.[13][14]

Bio-toilets in all trains: March 2019 target

In 2014, IR and DRDO developed a bio-toilet to replace direct-discharge toilets, which are currently the primary type of toilet used in railway coaches.[15] Upgrade of all trains to bio-toilet will be completed by the end of fy2018-19 (c. Dec 2017).[16]

The direct discharge of human waste from trains onto the tracks corrodes rails, costing IR tens of millions of rupees a year in rail-replacement work. Flushing a bio-toilet discharges human waste into an underfloor holding tank where anaerobic bacteria remove harmful pathogens and break the waste down into neutral water and methane, which can then be harmlessly discharged onto the tracks.[15] IR plans to completely phase out direct-discharge toilets by 2020 or 2021. All-new coaches were installed in 2016, with older rolling stock to gradually becoming retrofitted. After Comptroller and Auditor General of India found 200,000 complaints related to the foul smelling and blocked bio-toilets, IR announced that it will add 80,000 bio-toilets (each costing INR 1 lakh) in fy2018-2019 and will start installing much improved "vacuum bio-toilets" (each costing INR 2.5 lakh) as well.[17] By Feb 2018, over 100,000 biotoilets have been installed, and project is on target to have 100% biotoilets by 31 March 2019.[18]

Infrastructure

Stations

Station redevelopment

Under a US$1 trillion initiative,[19] 600[19] railway stations will be redeveloped by monetizing 2700 acres of spare railway land under the 1,070,000 crore (US$150 billion) plan undertaken by Indian Railway Stations Development Corporation by converging it with the Atal Mission for Rejuvenation and Urban Transformation and Smart Cities Mission in collaboration with Ministry of Urban Development, Rail Land Development Authority and National Buildings Construction Corporation. Following monetization of land, 680,000 crore (US$95 billion) will be used for the commercial development, 280,000 crore (US$39 billion) for station redevelopment and the remaining 110,000 crore (US$15 billion) as surplus with the Railways. Initially A1 and A category stations will be prioritised.[20] To begin with 22 stations will be developed by end of 2018.[16]

In the first batch, IRSDC invited proposals in March 2018 for redeveloping 3 stations over two years, including the Chandigarh railway station, Bijwasan railway station and Anand Vihar railway station costing Rs140 crore, Rs310 crore and Rs206 crore respective.[19]

Tracks

Dedicated freight corridors

There are 2 under implementation and 4 approved DFCs with many more planned. DFC will convert existing and implement new DFC as High-speed rail corridors of India.[8]

Track gauge conversion: March 2022 target

Indian railways is converting its entire network (except heritage routes) to 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) broad gauge to enhance viability. New and converted broad gauge tracks are being introduced at the rate of 7.7 km per day. IR has projected completion date of the same till 2022.[21][22][23][24]

Track renewal

In FY 2018-19 budget, 36,000 of broad gauge renewal was approved to enhance the safety.[25]

Track electrification: March 2021 target

Expedited target completion date is now March 2021 (c. March 2018).[26][27][25]

Electrification of all routes to save on the imported fuel costs and improve running speed, IR launched "Mission Electrification" in 2017 to electrify 100% or the remaining 38,000 km of the broad gauge network in five years after fy2017-18 to 2022-2023,[28] this target has been revised to 100% electrification by March 2021.[26][27] Railways annual fuel bill is 32,000 crore (US$4.49 billion or €4.13 billion), including 20,000 crore (US$2.80 billion or €2.58 billion) on diesel and converting to 100% electricity will save 10,000 crore (US$1.40 billion or €1.29 billion) by bringing the total fuel bill to 22,000 crore (US$3.08 billion or €2.84 billion) (c. Dec 2017).[28]

  • Annual fuel cost savings attained after 100% electrification: 10,000 crore (US$1.40 billion or €1.29 billion).[29][28]
  • Original target date for 100% broad gauge electrification: from fy2017-2018 to fy2022-2023 (remaining 38,000 km in 5 yrs) (c. Dec 2017).[28]
  • Already completed at the end of fy2017-2018: 42% (28,000 km), 4000 km or 400 km per month completed this year against previous year's 200 km per month,[16][16] residual 38,000 km (c. Dec 2017).[28]
  • Expedited approved completion target at the end of fy2018-2019: 13,675 km target, residual target 24,325 km (c. Mar 2018).[26][27][28]
  • Expedited completion target at the end of fy2019-2020: 10,500 km target, residual target 14,325 km (c. Dec 2017).[27][26][16]
  • Expedited completion target at the end of fy2020-2021: 100% electrification of all broad gauge network.[26][27]

Doubling of tracks

Doubling of tracks to reduce congestion and delays while improving safety. 15,000 km double tracks already exist by 2016 and funding for 12,500 km more track doubling was approved in 2016.[24] In fy2018-19 budget, 18,000 km of broad gauge track doubling and conversion was approved along with 36,000 of track renewal for safety.[25]

Power and fuel

Off-the-grid solar-powered trains: 1.13 gigawatt solar power target by March 2022

Off-the-grid solar powered trains by installing 1 gigawatt of solar and 130 megawatts of wind power between 2017-2022.[30][31] India introduced world's first solar powered train in June 2017 as well as 50 coaches with rooftop solar farms.[32] In July 2017 IR rolled out its first DEMU train with rooftop solar panels that power the lights, fans, and information display systems inside passenger coaches.[33]

Rooftop solar electricity

Rooftop solar electricity at stations to reduce long-term fuel cost and protect environment.[34]

Traintop solar electricity

In 2017, first train with solar rooftop panels started. Increasingly more trains will be operated with renewal onboard solar electricity generation.

LED lighting

Sustainable LED lighting on all stations by March 2018 to cut electricity costs (Dec 2017).[35]

Safety

Elimination of unmanned level crossings on broad gauge network: March 2020 target

Target completion date for this is March 2020.[25] Fy2017-18 has allocated funds to eliminate remaining 4,267 unmanned railway crossings on broad gauge routes in the next two years by March 2020.[25] A 100,000 crore (US$14 billion) "National Rail Safety Fund," for a complete safety upgrade by 2022, was announced in the 2017 Union Budget; among other improvements, the program would eliminate unmanned level crossings by March 2020.[36] Elimination of Unmanned Level Crossings at an average of 1217 per year by building an average of 1066 Road Over Bridges (ROB) and Road Under Bridges (RUB) per year (May 2016).[37][24]

Automated fog pilot assistance system

GPS-enabled Fog Pilot Assistance System railway signalling devices, old practice of putting firecrackers on train tracks to alter train divers was done away with by initially installing 6,095 devices in four most affected zones in 2017, Northern Railway zone, North Central Railway zone, North Eastern Railway zone and North Western Railway zone.[38]

Automated fire alarm system

Automated fire alarm system project started from 2013 when improved automated fire alarm System in Rajdhani Express trains were installed, these will be installed in the AC coaches of all regular trains.[39]

CCTV camera on stations

963 stations will have CCTV camera by the end of 2018.[16] Progressively CCTV cameras and wifi will be installed on all trains and stations.[25]

CCTV camera inside trains

IR has started to install cameras in some of the trains from fy2017-18 under the Nirbhaya fund. Progressively CCTV cameras will be installed in all trains.[25]

Information technology

Digital India driven digitalisation of railway to improvement efficiency and reduce cost. 3,500,000 million (equivalent to 4.0 trillion or US$55 billion in 2019) funding was approved in 2016.[24]

Services

Wi-fi-enabled trains and stations

Progressively CCTV cameras and wifi will be installed on all trains and stations (announcement c. March 2018).[25] In September 2015, the IR and Google announced a joint initiative intent on delivering high-speed wi-fi access across 400 major railway stations. The first 100 stations were connected to the network by the end of 2016, with Mumbai Central station the first to be connected.[40] The Railtel-Google free high-speed public WiFi service is currently available at Mumbai Central, Chennai Central, Chennai Egmore, Madurai Junction, Coimbatore Junction , Chandigarh, Old Delhi, Pune, Bhubaneshwar, Bhopal, Ranchi, Raipur, Vijayawada, Kacheguda, Ernakulum, Thiruvananthapuram, Thrissur, Jabalpur, Vishakhapatnam, Jaipur, Kanpur, Lucknow, Gorakhpur, Patna, Guwahati, Ujjain, Sealdah and Allahabad, Howrah , Sealdah etc [41]

Tickets

Select passengers with confirmed tickets will now be allowed to transfer tickets to someone else. Indian Railway Catering and Tourism Corporation (IRCTC) is now offering a pay-on-delivery option for train tickets on its website and app, where the customers can book their tickets and pay on delivery.

Escalators

Progressively escalators will be installed on all stations with a footfall of more than 25,000 per day.[25]

Station upgrades

600 stations will be upgraded, including 400 to be redeveloped, progressively to enhance services, safety and security.[25]

Social responsibility

Rainwater harvesting

Rainwater harvesting with 1885 rainwater harvesting systems already installed at different locations by December 2016.[42]

Reforestation

Reforestation on the railway land and along the tracks is being undertaken.[43]

References

  1. "GE, Alstom land $5.6-billion deals to supply locomotives for railways". Economic Times. 10 November 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  2. "Indian Railways choose vibrant colors for semi-high speed train coaches". The Financial Express. 10 January 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  3. "India and Japan ink pacts on bullet train, defense, nuclear energy". Economic Times. 13 December 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  4. "Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train may run on elevated corridor". The Indian Express. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  5. "Bullet trains will go to private operator after first 5 years". The Indian Express. 6 January 2016. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  6. "Japan offers to fund 81% of India's first bullet train worth $15 billion". Economic Times. 11 December 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  7. "Railways gathers pace with Gatimaan". The Hindu. 5 April 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  8. Railways may invest Rs 20-lakh crore in high-speed corridors, Economic Times, 23 Dec 2017.
  9. "Locomotive Factories in Bihar: In cold storage for years, two Railway projects to start soon". Indian Express. 30 October 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  10. "GE Gets $2.6 Billion IR Contract". Wall Street Journal. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  11. "Rail ministry awards Rs 14,656-cr Marhowra locomotive project to GE". Business Standard. 9 November 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  12. 160km self-propelled coaches, Economic Times, 15 Mar 2018.
  13. "Indian Railways gets first model rake of luxury 'Make in India' coaches". The Economic Times. Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. 11 January 2016. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  14. "Indian Railways unveils 'Make in India' train coaches with new look". The Financial Express. The Indian Express Group. 13 January 2016. Retrieved 13 January 2016.
  15. "Swachh Rail-Swachh Bharat: IR aims to equip coaches with bio-toilets by 2021". Indian Express. 29 March 2015. Retrieved 11 January 2016.
  16. Electrification of Delhi-Jaipur rail route to be completed by December 2018: Railway Board Chairman, Economic Times, 23 Dec 2017.
  17. Railways target 80,000 bio-toilets in 2018, vacuum bio-toilets next in line, Economic Times, 20 Dec 2017.
  18. Over 1 lakh biotoilets installed, Economic Times, 17 Mar 2018.
  19. Indian Railways unit invites proposals to modernize 3 stations, Livemint, 17 Mar 2018.
  20. Railways appoints IRSDC as nodal agency for station redevelopment, Livemint, 5 Dec 2017.
  21. Indian narrow gauge shrinks further under Project Unigauge, The Railway Magazine, March 2017.
  22. Uni-gauge Policy of Indian Railways, 29 Jul 2016.
  23. Speeding up gauge conversion, The Hindu, 2012.
  24. Indian Railways orders conversion to Broad Gauge, Rail Digest, 12 Apr 2017.
  25. , Livemint, Feb 2018.
  26. Breakdown of electrification
  27. Railways will spend Rs.1370 crores on electrification of rail track, Rs.15000 crores will be saved every year , Dainik Bhaskar, 11 Mar 2018.
  28. Railways set to electrify 38,000 km route in next five years, Economic Times, 15 Dec 2017.
  29. "Mission Electrification to save railways power bill by Rs. 10k crore". The New Indian Express. 4 November 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
  30. "India's first solar-powered DEMU train launched". The Hindu. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  31. Railways, IIT-Madras tie up to power AC coaches with solar energy | News | Eco-Business - Asia's Cleantech & Sustainable Business Community. Eco-Business (5 August 2013). Retrieved on 17 August 2013.
  32. India’s new solar-powered train is the first in the world, June 2017
  33. Ghoshal, Devjyot. "India is rolling out trains with solar-powered coaches that'll save thousands of litres of diesel". Quartz. Retrieved 17 July 2017.
  34. "NORTHERN RAILWAYS TO INSTALL 5 MW ROOFTOP SOLAR IN FOUR OF ITS STATIONS". Archived from the original on 2017-03-03. Retrieved 2017-12-23.
  35. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/all-railway-stations-to-be-100-pc-led-lit-by-april-2018-rlys/articleshow/62138170.cms Indian Railways plans to make all stations 100% LED lit by March 31, 2018], Times of India, 19 Dec 2017.
  36. "Union Budget 2017: Railways get Rs 55000-crore boost, will have better safety, no fare hikes". The Indian Express. 1 February 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2017.
  37. Indian Railways commissions around 4800 kilometer of broad gauge track in last two financial years which is a record performance, 12 May 2016.
  38. "Indian Railways to use GPS-enabled devices to fight fog this season", The Economic Times, 12 December 2017.
  39. "Indian Railways develops Automatic Fire and Smoke Detection System". Retrieved 5 September 2013.
  40. "Going online: Google brings Wi-Fi to Indian railway stations". Railway Technology. 19 January 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  41. http://m.thehindu.com/news/national/google-launches-free-public-wifi-service-at-five-railway-stations/article8576570.ece
  42. Rain Water Harvesting System In Indian Railway, 7 Dec 2016.
  43. India Plants 50 Million Trees in One Day, Smashing World Record, National Geographic, July 2016.
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