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July 06, 2012

World Railway News.... 6th July 2012

UK
Office of Rail Regulation

Southeastern fined £65,000 after train in Sussex ran ‘out of control’

The train operating company Southeastern has today been fined £65,000 and ordered to pay costs of £22,589.50, following a prosecution brought by the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) for breaches of health and safety law which led to a train running out of control for over three miles in East Sussex, in November 2010.

 On 8 November 2010, the 06:45 London Charing Cross to Hastings service was approaching, and due tostop at, Stonegate station, when the train’s braking system failed. Instead of making its scheduled stop at Stonegate, the train passed the station at approximately 50 mph, and continued, with its emergency brakecontinuously applied, through a level crossing before finally coming to a stop 3.22 miles from where the brakes were first applied.

 Today’s sentencing at Maidstone Crown Court follows an ORR investigation into the incident, which found that Southeastern had failed to provide an effective system of work to reliably ensure the availability of sand on its class 375 trains for use as part of the braking system. In order to improve braking performance sand is deposited onto the track when the brakes are used, increasing friction and reducing braking distance. ORR’s investigation also found that, in addition to the runaway train, four more Southeastern trains showed evidence of not having sand supplies refilled.

 Ian Prosser, Director of Railway Safety at ORR, said:
“Train operators have an important duty to ensure that their workers and members of the public are not exposed to unnecessary safety risks.
“In this case, Southeastern, through poor planning and management, failed to ensure their trains were safe for use on the rail network. This is clearly unacceptable, and led to the potentially catastrophic incident in East Sussex where a train ran out of control for over three miles.
“We welcome steps taken by Southeastern to improve its safety management since this incident. ORR is pressing Southeastern, and the whole rail sector, to develop and maintain systems which identify potential dangers so that they can be addressed before catastrophic risks become reality.”


World

International Railway Journal

ANSALDO STS Australia has won two contracts worth a total of $A 362m ($US 371m) to supply signalling systems for Rio Tinto's heavy-haul iron-ore operations in Australia.

FOLLOWING a five-year international arbitration hearing, Railroad Development Corporation (RDC), United States, has prevailed in its struggle with the Republic of Guatemala over the operation of the country's railway, Fegua, by its Guatemalan affiliate, FVG.

BUCHAREST Metro operator Metrorex has awarded Astaldi a €164m contract to build the northern extension of Line 4 from Parc Bazilescu to Laminorului and Lac Straulesti.

www.progressiverailroading.com US Railroad News

U.S. intermodal volume through June slightly ahead of record-year pace, AAR says

CN to build five long sidings on busy B.C. North Line

Citizens committee reviews Santa Clara VTA's Measure A spending

Charlotte transit agency hikes fares

Reading and Northern to become Pennsylvania industrial park's service provider

Cleveland transit authority's 2013 tax budget 'stable'

Portland port, union agreement temporarily solves work dispute

Rutgers ad sales to raise $5,000 monthly for PATCO rail line


www.railway-technology.com Latest News

Scotland to cut rail journey times between Glasgow and Edinburgh
Scotland's government has outlined details of a £650m programme to reduce journey times on the Edinburgh - Falkirk High - Glasgow Queen Street line.       

                   
Virgin Media extends underground wi-fi service to 41 London tube stations
Virgin Media has extended its underground Wi-Fi service to 41 London tube stations, including Leicester Square, Warren Street and Stratford.       

                    I
Indian Cabinet approves Kochi metro rail project
The Union Cabinet of India has given the go-ahead for the Rs51.81bn ($941m) Kochi Metro Rail Project in Kerala.       

                   
Auckland Transport reveals City Rail Link plan
Auckland Transport in New Zealand has revealed the preferred route for the NZ$2.86bn ($2.3bn) City Rail Link (CRL), which will extend the existing underground line through the city centre.       


Feature:Read the full article here....
Eurostar's £700m refurbishment is about to bear fruit with the arrival of the first new-look train in 2013. Julian Turner asks Eurostar commercial director Nick Mercer about the on-board digital revolution, the shift from air to rail, and new markets.    

Siemens
Fully automatic VAL metro system goes operational in Uijeongbu, South Korea

A fully automatic VAL metro system has been inaugurated in the South Korean city of Uijeongbu. Driverless passenger services commenced yesterday. The mass transit system was constructed as a turnkey Private Public Partnership project (PPP) by a Korean consortium made up of six partners led by GS Engineering & Construction Corporation. Siemens supplied the automatic train control system (ATC) and equipped the operations control center (OCC) and depot as well as manufacturing 15 two-unit, rubber-tired VAL 208 vehicles. The customer is Uijeongbu Light Rail Transit (LRT) Co., Ltd.

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