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May 31, 2013

International & UK Railway News Friday 31st May 2013

 
 
 
 
TENDERS will be invited later this year by South Africa's Department of Transport to conduct a study into the likely cost and feasibility of building high-speed lines between the country's main cities. ...
 
THE president of Russian Railways (RZD), Mr Vladimir Yakunin, has pledged that the Russian rail network will continue to be vertically integrated for at least another two years.
 
IRJ at the 1520 Strategic Partnership: Mr Vladimir Yakunin, president of Russian Railways (RZD), has confirmed that the first high-speed line to be built in Russia will connect Moscow with Kazan.
 
MTR Shenzhen, the operator of Shenzhen Metro Line 4, has awarded Nanjing SR Puzhen Rail Transport (NPRT) a Yuan 420m ($US 67.74m) contract to supply 56 metro cars which will be delivered in 2013-14
 
 
 
  • AAR cites crude volume record, another carload decline and opposition to NITL-proposed switching rules
  • LaHood, two senators announce key step toward rail tunnel construction under Hudson River
  • L.A. port, Yang Ming pact includes container transfer facility expansion
  • Atlanta-to-Charlotte high-speed rail corridor to be subject of public scoping meetings
  • USDOT assigns members to National Freight Advisory Committee
  • Sound Transit opens construction bids for Northgate Link light-rail tunnel work
  • CSX schedules groundbreaking for Quebec intermodal facility
  • Montana short line lands EDA grant for major bridge repairs
  • Rail supplier news from Alstom, Odyssey Logistics, Bombardier and the NRC (May 31)

  •  
     
     
    Nanjing SR Puzhen to deliver 56 train cars to Shenzhen Metro Line 4 in China Midas Holdings' joint venture company Nanjing SR Puzhen Rail Transport (NPRT) has received a RMB420m ($68.5m) contract from China's MTR Corporation to deliver 56 train cars to the metro system of Shenzhen in China's Guangdong province. 
          
    Alstom and TMH to develop dual-voltage electric freight locomotive for Russian Railways
    Alstom and its Russian partner Transmashholding (TMH) have entered into an agreement with Russian Railways (RZD) to jointly develop a new dual-voltage electric locomotive. 
          
    Thales-Maziya consortium wins railway signalling contract from Prasa
    A consortium of Thales and Maziya has secured a €136m signalling contract from the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (Prasa). 
          
    MTR uses beam-and-winch equipment on viaduct construction in Hong Kong
    Hong Kong's Mass Transit Railway (MTR) is using beam-and-winch viaduct erection equipment for the first time to build major parts of the viaduct section of the South Island Line (East) railway project
     
     
     
    Construction firms fined £48,000 for worker injury at Winchester Station
    Geoffrey Osborne Ltd and SSE Contracting Ltd have been fined a total of £48,000 and ordered to pay costs of £40,934 following a prosecution brought by the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) for breaches of health and safety law which led to an electrician being injured after falling from height at Winchester Station, Hampshire, in 2010.
    On 9 December 2010, while rewiring an office within the station, an apprentice electrician employed by SSE Contracting fell over five metres through a ceiling onto a stairwell and suffered a dislocated elbow and a fractured foot. SSE Contracting had been sub-contracted by Geoffrey Osborne to complete electrical installation work as part of its refurbishment of Winchester Station.
    The sentencing hearing at Aldershot Magistrates’ Court follows an investigation by ORR which found neither company had adequately planned for work taking place at height within the station. A detailed assessment of safety risks was not carried out and basic protective structures such as scaffold guardrails around the edge of the roof bordering the suspended ceiling were not installed. Both companies pleaded guilty to breaches of the Work at Height Regulations 2005 at Basingstoke Magistrates’ Court on 11 April 2013.
    David Keay, ORR’s Head of Inspection, said:
    "Geoffrey Osborne Ltd and SSE Contracting Ltd failed to work together and protect workers from the obvious safety risks of working at height in Winchester Station.
    "This incident clearly demonstrates the need for all companies to take their responsibilities seriously, protecting workers with proper planning and assessment of risks, as well as installing basic safety measures such as scaffold guardrails. ORR will continue to press for further improvements in safety at rail construction sites, and if necessary, prosecute companies for criminal breaches in law."

    Background information

    Financial penalties imposed by the court:
    • Geoffrey Osborne Ltd has been fined £24,000 and ordered to pay costs of £19,987.48.
    • SSE Contracting Ltd has been fined £24,000 and ordered to pay costs of £20,946.87.
    Our full press release is available at: http://www.rail-reg.gov.uk/server/show/ConWebDoc.11167




    National Rail Trends Portal newsletter - May 2013


    (UK) Network Rail

    National train performance for period 2 is 93.5%

    Punctuality on the railways reached 93.5% during Period 2, according to monthly performance data released today by Network Rail.
    The data for Britain's train services covers the period from 28 April 2013 - 25 May 2013. This compares to 92.3% for the same period last year. The moving annual average is now at 91.0%.

    Franchise
    Punctuality %
    Period 2, 2013/14
    Punctuality %
    Period 2, 2012/13
    Moving annual
    average (MAA)
    Arriva Trains Wales
    95.9
    93.9
    93.5
    c2c Rail
    98.2
    97.2
    97.3
    Chiltern
    97.3
    95.0
    95.2
    Crosscountry
    91.6
    88.0
    87.2
    East Coast
    89.4
    87.7
    84.1
    East Midlands Trains
    95.1
    91.9
    92.6
    First Capital Connect
    91.8
    89.2
    88.5
    First Great Western
    92.6
    90.4
    89.1
    First Scotrail
    93.7
    94.6
    92.8
    First Transpennine Express
    95.6
    94.4
    91.9
    Greater Anglia
    95.7
    92.5
    92.6
    London Midland
    89.2
    90.4
    85.8
    London Overground
    96.5
    96.1
    96.6
    Merseyrail
    97.2
    95.0
    95.7
    Northern Rail
    93.4
    93.9
    90.6
    Southeastern
    93.9
    92.6
    91.2
    Southern
    90.9
    90.2
    87.9
    South West Trains
    94.2
    91.6
    91.7
    Virgin Trains
    85.7
    82.9
    83.7
    Total National Performance
    93.5
    92.3
    91.0


    Notes:

    • Infrastructure problems, overhead line and signalling equipment, caused the majority of delays on the West Coast Main Line during the period thus impacting upon Virgin’s punctuality. A series of measures to address performance on the Southern end of the route will be announced in the next few weeks
    • Arrived on time - the measure of train punctuality also known as PPM (public performance measure) means trains arriving at their destinations within five minutes for commuter services and within 10 minutes for long distance services.
    • This measure of punctuality is commonly used throughout Europe
    • National train punctuality is measured for all trains across the whole network, including cancelled services and delays caused by external factors (such as vandalism, extreme weather, suicides etc).
    • Punctuality did not start to be recorded in this vigorous and thorough way until 1997. Before then Railtrack, and BR before, did not measure all services and also excluded external factors and other items from their numbers
    • These figures represent provisional data for the period and individual operators' performance data may vary slightly from the full period performance report that
    • Network Rail publishes on its website every month
    • Network Rail and the train operators run more trains across Great Britain than are run in most European countries - almost 20% more than in France and 60% more than in Italy.
    • Great Britain's 24,000 trains per-day is also more than Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Portugal and Norway combined
    Right time train performance data (% of trains arriving within 59 seconds of schedule) both for period 10 and for the year to the end of period 10 are also available by using this link http://www.networkrail.co.uk/about/performance/
     
     
    Great Western Railway clock is lovingly restored
     
    A 19th century Great Western Railway clock has been lovingly restored to its former glory by Network Rail after it stopped working two years ago.
    The GWR clock, which dates back to 1852, is a double-aspect clock and keeps time at the historic Severn Bridge Junction signal box in Shrewsbury – the largest mechanical signal box in the world.
    The signal box, which opened in 1904, and its internal fitments are Grade 2 listed and it operates 24 hours a day, every day of the year. It houses 180 levers controlling track signals and points – of which 90 are still in use.
    The clock would have been produced for a large signal box with a minimum of two signallers, one at each end of the frame – the method of operation in use today at Severn Bridge Junction.
    Mark Langman, Network Rail’s Wales route managing director, said: “The clock was originally built by the Great Western Railway at its famous Swindon works and first used in the Oxford area – though we can’t be sure at which signal box.
    “It had been keeping time at Severn Bridge Junction signal box for many years until it stopped ticking two years ago and was put into safe storage.
    “We sourced a local expert in Adrian Donnelly, a Shrewsbury-based clock and barometer specialist, who has done a wonderful job restoring the clock back to its best.
    “Adrian enthused on the quality of the mechanism and has accurately dated its manufacture back to 1852. By completing this important restoration, another piece of railway heritage has been preserved for future generations."
     
     
     
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