Train derailments and explosions and chemical spills

Train service was disrupted in China's northwest Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region due to a windstorm, local media reported Monday, citing authorities.

Windstorm Disrupts Train Service in Northwestern China
https://sputniknews.com/asia/201705011053162307-china-trains-windstorm/

According to Xinhua news agency, the movement of eight passenger trains was stopped for safety reasons late on Sunday after wind speed amounted to 140 kilometers per hour (about 87 miles per hour). Most of the trains resumed operation after 9 a.m. local time (01:00 GMT).

No data on victims or damages has been provided.

Train service in China is often disrupted due to bad weather conditions, with some trains being derailed by windstorms.
 
High-speed train derails in Germany’s Dortmund
http://tass.com/world/944104

May, 1, 2017 - An ICE (InterCity Express) high-speed train has derailed at the main train station in Germany’s Dortmund, federal police twitted on Monday.

No casualties are reported as of yet. The ICE-945 train was en route from Dusseldorf to Berlin.

"Rescue services have started evacuation of passengers from last carriages," the police said adding a helicopter had been dispatched to the scene.

German railway company Deutsche Bahn has confirmed the reports about the incident, noting Dortmund’s train station had been shut out.


A high-speed train derailed on Monday near a railway station in the city of Dortmund.

High-Speed Train Derails in German City of Dortmund
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201705021053181406-german-train-derailed/

A high-speed train ICE 945 heading from the western German city of Bochum for Berlin derailed on Monday near a railway station in the city of Dortmund, local media reported.

The incident occurred at about 16:47 GMT as the train was passing a railroad switch, the Bild media outlet reported.

Nobody was injured in the incident, according to media. Causes of the derailment remain unknown.

The deadliest crash in the history of German high-speed trains occurred on June 3, 1998, near the city of Eschede, when a wheel fracture resulted in the train’s derailment. The derailed train collided with a bridge causing its collapse. The incident left 101 people killed and 88 injured.
 
There was a bad one on Vancouver Island this past month - A train carrying logs derailed in a small community killing three people and injured two others. This is an old rail line and somewhere else they had said that in the historic use of the rail line there had never been a serious incident: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/b-c-forestry-firm-halts-operations-after-train-derailment-kills-3-workers-1.4081160

April 21, 2017

B.C. forestry firm halts operations after train derailment kills 3 workers

The company operating a train that derailed and killed three people in a northern Vancouver Island community stopped business Friday out of respect for the families of the victims.

Two people were killed Thursday in Woss, B.C., and RCMP Cpl. Tammy Douglas confirmed Friday that a third victim died after being transported to hospital. Police said two others were also taken to hospital.

A joint statement from Western Forest Products and the union representing its workers said counselling services were made available to the employees, families and community affected by the tragedy.

Woss is located about 75 kilometres southeast of Port McNeill and has about 200 residents. The forestry firm is one of the area's major employers.

The crash occurred on the Englewood Railway, a 90-kilometre long spur line operated by Western Forest Products.

[...]

A few days later a CP Rail derailment near Thunder Bay, Ont. took place - no injuries: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/thunder-bay/train-derailment-1.4086910

April 26, 2017 CP Rail is investigating a cargo train derailment on Thunder Bay's north side today.

The railway said the incident occurred at about 11:15 am, when 10 empty hopper cars left the track at a crossing on Maureen Street.

Earlier (March 30th, 2017) an interview with a conductor had this to say: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/cp-rail-engineers-training-1.4046049



'They are scared': CP workers say rookie engineers ill-prepared for dangerous job


CEO says state-of-the-art simulators help speed up training process

High in the mountains of southeastern B.C., the conductor of a 25,000-tonne Canadian Pacific Railway freight train pulling 2.5 kilometres of cars loaded with potash got a bad feeling.

Headed west to Revelstoke, the train had just cleared a tunnel and was starting to build momentum downhill when he turned to the engineer, the man operating the massive vehicle, and said: "You know we're tippin' over here?"

Terrified the train was about to slide out of control down the mountain, the conductor flipped the emergency lever — overriding the engineer's controls — bringing the train to a screeching stop before it could barrel towards catastrophe.

CBC agreed not to identify the conductor because he fears he'd be fired for speaking out about what happened on the mountain last fall.

He said the new engineer had just been qualified after three months of training on CP's "Mountain Subdivision" and had failed to ensure adequate air pressure in the brakes for the steep downward grade.

CBC News has heard from multiple sources inside the company who say a recent group of engineer trainees for the mountain routes expressed concern to CP officials that they felt ill-prepared for the job after just a few months of training but were promoted anyway.

"They are scared because they are forced into it," said the quick-thinking conductor who stepped in for his rookie engineer.

"They are telling them, 'We're not ready. We're not qualified.' But the company and Transport Canada say, 'Oh yeah, we'll qualify them. Only 2 ½ months on the mountain? But what the hell. We've got a warm body in the seat. Hopefully all goes well.'"

The union representing CP engineers has been sounding the alarm over the company's approach to training, which also includes an effort to train managers and office staff — some of whom say they had no professional desire to operate trains — with a few months of instruction.

[...] {much more}
 
mabar said:
Another one

http://rt.com/usa/258057-amtrak-train-derails-philadelphia/ said:

5 dead, 50+ injured injured after Amtrak train derails in Philadelphia


An Amtrak train has derailed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, leaving at least five people dead and dozens injured as emergency workers scramble to help victims at the scene.

The accident occured on the Wheatsheaf Lane block, when seven cars, including the engine, on a New York-bound train derailed in northern Philadelphia. More than 50 people have been injured, officials added, with six in critical condition.

Amtrak said that about 238 people and five crew members were on the train at the time of the accident, which has been dubbed a level three mass casualty incident.

The accident is "an absolute, disastrous mess," Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter said to reporters. "It is a devastating scene down there."

Nutter added that hundreds of police, firefighters and emergency personnel have responded to the scene.

At least 10 people have been transported to Temple University Hospital's trauma unit, according to CNN. Others have been moved to Jefferson University Hospital, Hahnemann University Hospital, and Einstein Medical Center, ABC 6 reported.

Nutter said that officials do not yet know the cause of the derailment.

Some media employees were onboard. The Associated Press' Paul Cheung said he was in the back of the train when it seemed as if it ran off the tracks. He added that the front of the train bore the worst of the damage.

Janelle Richards of NBC Nightly News was also on the train. She reported that there was "a lot of smoke" and that the train was "jerking back and forth."

The train was heading into a turn when the accident occurred, according to AP. All service has been suspended between New York and Philadelphia, Amtrak stated. People in the area have been advised to stay away from the crash site.

The Federal Railroad Administration has sent investigators to the crash site. The FBI is also sending investigators, though it has ruled out terrorism as a cause.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said he is in contact with authorities regarding the incident and is "closely monitoring"the situation.

Brandon Bostian, the engineer of the Amtrak train involved in the crash that killed eight in Philadelphia in 2015, has been charged with manslaughter, US State of Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a statement.

Amtrak Engineer Charged With Manslaughter for 2015 Crash
https://sputniknews.com/us/201705131053570049-amtrack-engineer-crash-manslaughter/

Bostian has been charged with eight counts of manslaughter among other offenses, according to the statement.

“My office filed criminal charges against Brandon Bostian, the engineer of the Amtrak 188 train involved in the deadly crash in Philadelphia on May 12, 2015,” Shapiro said on Friday.

Shapiro added that the charges included eight counts of involuntary manslaughter, one count of causing or risking a catastrophe and numerous counts of reckless endangerment.

On May 12, 2015 Amtrak train 188 travelling from Washington, DC to New York City derailed on the outskirts of Philadelphia. Eight people died in the accident and more than 200 were injured.
 
A passenger train in northern Greece derailed on Saturday night, killing four and injuring at least five more, some seriously.

Casualties Reported After Train Carrying Dozens of Passengers Derails in Greece
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201705131053593027-greek-passenger-train-derails/

The death toll in the Saturday night train derailment in Greece has risen to four, railway company TrainOSE confirmed in a statement.

An OSE Intercity passenger train was heading from Athens to Thessaloniki with about 100 passengers onboard when it derailed at 9:40 pm local time near the town of Adendro, less than 40 kilometers from the train's destination. The train hurtled into a nearby home, killing four and injuring several more. The driver is among those badly hurt, according to local news agency Emvolos.

A dozen fire brigades have been deployed to the area to help passengers escape jammed carriage cars. Local media report that carriages have been badly crumpled and rescue personnel had to search them for trapped passengers. Themanews reports that half a dozen passengers had to be extracted from derailed carriages by rescue crews.

Witnesses to the accident said they saw the train crash into a house and watched two individuals inside jump from a balcony, the Washington Post reports. Another resident of the house was trapped, according to local media.

The cause of the crash has not yet been determined. The injured have been transported to local hospitals.
 
Tues. June 27, 2017 - Manhattan, NY - Passenger train derailment

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A New York City subway train derailed in upper Manhattan on Tuesday, causing minor injuries to 34 people and forcing the evacuation of passengers from dark, smoke-filled carriages, officials and witnesses said.

New York City subway train derails, 34 injured (Photos)
https://www.yahoo.com/news/york-city-subway-train-derailment-causes-minor-injuries-163827648.html

Authorities said the southbound train struck a tunnel wall just before 10 a.m., causing two cars to derail near the 125th-street station in Harlem. The crash was being investigated, the city's Office of Emergency Management said.

Witnesses on the train posted photos on social media that showed damage to the floor and a door of the train.

Following the accident, service was suspended or rerouted on several subway lines between upper Manhattan and northern Brooklyn, the Metropolitan Transportation Authority said. Free shuttle buses ran between Columbus Circle in midtown Manhattan and points north to 145th street.


A morning commute for New Yorkers turned into a chaotic scene today when a subway scraped the side of a tunnel wall, prompting passengers to evacuate and walk underground through the smoke and darkness.

New York City subway riders evacuated from 4 trains after emergency brake incident; 34 injured (Video)
http://abcnews.go.com/US/passengers-evacuated-disabled-nyc-subway-train/story?id=48301913

The southbound A train was just outside the 125th Street station in Harlem when the emergency break automatically turned on, according to Joe Lhota, chairman of the Metropolitan Transportation Authority. The train bucked forward and backward, causing two of the train's eight cars to derail and scrape the side of the wall, Lhota said. The train was 200 feet from the 125th Street and St. Nicholas Avenue station at the time.

That train was evacuated, Lhota said, as were three other trains in the same tunnel.
 
July 2, 2017 - Steilacoom, Washington State - Passenger train derailment

Amtrak Train Derails in Washington State (Video)
https://sputniknews.com/us/201707031055168971-amtrak-train-derails-washington-state/

The train derailed in Steilacoom, near the Chambers Bay Marina, with cars tipping nearly into the water. However, there appear to be no casualties and only minor injuries have been reported so far, Ed Troyer of the Pierce County Sheriff's Office told local station Komo News. No one from the train, which was carrying around 200 passengers, is believed to have fallen into the water.

Four cars have gone off the tracks and others are believed to be in danger of sliding in.

Police, fire, medical and other emergency services are on the scene. The Gig Harbor police tweeted footage of the train lying on its side near the water.
Police are apparently bringing the injured to the marina.

Amtrak's most recent derailments were both at New York's Penn Station, one in late March and one in early April. Both caused huge delays at the major transit hub.

The cause of the accident is not yet known. ​The Gig Harbor Police Department is also helping local environmental officials set up pollution control booms to help prevent fuel from leaking from the cars into the water of the bay.

Chambers Bay is some 40 miles from Seattle and less than 25 miles from the capital, Olympia.


Police in western Washington State said an Amtrak train derailment southwest of Tacoma threatened to send several rail cars into the Puget Sound but resulted in only minor injuries.

Amtrak train derails near Tacoma; no major injuries (Photos)
https://www.usatoday.com/story/travel/2017/07/02/amtrak-train-derails-near-tacoma-no-major-injuries/447060001/

The derailment took place Sunday afternoon in the Chambers Bay area near Steilacoom, Wash., The (Tacoma) News Tribune reported.

Passengers were being evacuated and police from nearby Gig Harbor, Wash., said they were assisting with patrol boats. The Pierce County, Wash., Sheriff's Department said there were only minor injuries.

In a statement, Amtrak said Train 506 was traveling between Vancouver, British Columbia, and Eugene-Springfield, Ore., with 267 passengers onboard, when it derailed at the Chambers Bay Bridge. Amtrak confirmed only minor injuries among the passengers, and said no crew members were injured. The cause of the derailment was under investigation.
 
My partners dad was a long term train engineer when she was a kid, so she was telling me a few 'red flag' things that her dad had told her as a child. For instance (and this is back in the 60's and 70's) he became bitter over the rail-ties lack of maintenance whereby ties were not properly monitored and replaced, and he had said to her that in the future, if this continues, you will see a lot of train wrecks. He also, apparently, said crashes often involve the compression and collapse of three ties in succession that fail; and then the train is gone. He had talked about freight train stacking (heights we often see now) and the centers of gravity related, including domino effects. I asked what domino meant exactly in this situation and it was said that the term (as her dad had described it) relates to car profiles. So you need to arrange the cars so that you never have cars of the same type over a certain span i.e. if you have twenty five cattle cars in a row, this is a bad combination, they need to be mixed for better overall balancing.

Anyway, we watched the following documentary 'Why Trains Crash' a 2017 Documentary on The Passionate Eye http://www.cbc.ca/passionateeye/episodes/why-trains-crash

In the aftermath of the 2013 rail disaster in Lac Megantic, Que., a coroner’s report called the deaths of 47 people “violent” and “unavoidable.” A runaway freight train carrying 72 cars of crude oil derailed and exploded in the heart of the tiny town.

But what happened in Lac Megantic was far from unique. Derailments, head-on collisions, and accidents at road crossings involving freight and passenger trains claim many lives each year across North America. Often, the cause is human error combined with high speed.

Why Trains Crash examines the cause of recent deadly rail accidents, using detailed computerized re-enactments and emotional eyewitness accounts. At the same time, the film highlights the difficult work by investigators and safety experts seeking answers and determined to prevent future tragedies.

What’s at stake is a global mode of transportation poised for huge advancements. With examples like Japan’s super efficient bullet trains, the film looks ahead to a future in which train travel everywhere is fast, efficient and — above all else — safe.

For more information regarding the status of train control technologies in Canada, read the Final Report of the Advisory Council on Railway Safety’s Train Control Working Group.

You can read a copy from the working group here (pdf) http://www.tc.gc.ca/media/documents/railsafety/train-control-working-group-final-report.pdf and here is the full investigation report (pdf) http://www.tsb.gc.ca/eng/rapports-reports/rail/2013/r13d0054/r13d0054.pdf

Some of this was focused on the Lac Megantic accident, yet some of the well know accidents in the U.S. are highlighted as to possible/probable causation.

After checking the film out, I started thinking about the trains around here - lot's of them on very dangerous mountain routes. Some of these trains pull coal-cars in the magnitude of up to over one hundred cars, and they are super heavy. The oil tanker cars (like at Lac Megantic) add the explosive flammability aspect that is subject to a lot of possible errors; chemical cars too are a high risk (liquid or gases). As for oil, I think this is why pipe lines makes more sense to me, even though they need to be constructed maximizing containment (another controversial subject indeed). Nevertheless, I've walked the tracks around here and seen degraded ties, yet I'm sure they are taking precautions, or maybe it's just hopeful thinking that they are doing this enough as they have had their fair share of train derailments, some nasty.

Back to this documentary though, and in reference to the Lac Megantic disaster, they take the viewer step by step through what happened in a reenactment. At around the 33:00 minute mark, after explaining how the engineer did not set enough breaks (two less than he should have) with a train sitting on an incline pointed in the direction of town. At one point he noticing a lot of smoke from the engine (and calling for a support conversations about it) whereby he (and whoever he consulted) was satisfied and left for his customary sleep off site. Watching this part, they then make mention of people passing by and phoning in to the fire department because they could see flames or sparks coming up from the engine exhaust, and thus the fire department was dispatched. They say in the film that at some point the fire department entered the train itself (the engine) and turned it off to arrest the flames. At first i was thinking, why would they do that, why would they enter a highly complex piece of machinery and not communicate with the engineer or someone from the railway? Reading the investigation, however, indicated they did communicate, and who the railway sent was part of the problem, or so it seems.

This continues in description with the statement of the train being powered off and the compressor system shut down, eventually dissipating pressure to the breaks of the train. Other failures going back to the engineer are brought up too, such as improper setting of the breaks themselves while pressurized (much focuses on this in the actual investigation report).

Here is some of what was said in the final investigation report (see above for link):

The lead locomotive was left running to comply with United States air brake rules.
...
During this time, the LE also noted that the lead locomotive engine was producing excessive amounts of black and white smoke. This smoke was the result of engine oil that had
superheated after building up in the body of the turbocharger. The build -up was caused by failure of a non-standard engine repair. The LE discussed the smoke with the rail traffic controller (RTC) in Bangor, Maine. It was expected that the situation would improve and be dealt with in the morning.

Despite the engine repair, the train had other engines that could compensate.

Here is how the fire department responded to a reported fire and what happened:

At 2340, a 911 call was made to report a fire on a train at Nantes. The Nantes Fire Department responded to the call and extinguished the fire. To do so, the firefighters shut off the locomotive’s fuel supply, thus stopping the engine, and moved the electrical breakers inside the cab to the off position, which was in keeping with railway instruction. The employee who was dispatched by MMA to meet the firefighters was a track foreman with no locomotive operations background. As a result, another locomotive was not started. After notifying the RTC in Farnham, Quebec, of the train’s condition, this employee soon left the site with the firefighters.

One would have to read the full report details (191 pages), yet failures before and after the LE left for sleep was acute with errors:

Shortly after the LE departed by taxi for the hotel, the oil that had accumulated and superheated in the turbocharger caught fire. Neither the LE from MMA-001 or the LE from MMA-002 was called to return to Nantes, due to the impact that it would have on train departure time the following morning and due to mandatory rest provisions. Having to perform a No.1 brake test the next morning may have been an inconvenience, but avoiding in convenience was not a sufficient reason to bring the LE back to start another locomotive that night. Because another locomotive was not started, the pressure in the train’s independent brakes was not maintained.

The RTC, who had experience securing trains at Nantes, was aware that no locomotive was left running. However, he knew that train securement should not be dependent on a running locomotive, and assumed that the train had been adequately secured with sufficient hand brakes. Without a compelling cue to the contrary, the RTC did not consider that shutting down the locomotives would affect the securement of the train.

This continues in description with the statement that once the train was powered off the compressor system shut down, eventually dissipating pressure to the breaks of the train. Other failures going back to the engineer are brought up too, such as improper setting of the breaks themselves while pressurized.

So, it seems simple as to causation, yet wow, there was a great many missteps by other people and without solid protocols. Ultimately, the employer failed in so many ways and is responsible for all the procedural errors. So very sad and unnecessary.

The film ends with the whole subject of the Japanese rail system (even magnetic test trains at 375 miles an hour). At one point they discuss how, after the trains are shut down in the evening, three thousand workers head out to inspect and change everything that needs attention - that is some work crew. Their advanced systems technologies also does other sophisticated monitoring, so for now it seems to be successful. :/

You can find the documentary film also on youtube under Nova https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42mgj51IJyw (it will not embed here)
 
August 19, 2017: Train derailment in India leaves at least 23 people killed and 40 wounded.

http://edition.cnn.com/2017/08/19/asia/india-train-derailment/index.html
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/utkal-express-train-crash-what-we-know-so-far/articleshow/60134481.cms
 
Not a train derailment, per say but a two-train collision, one in Egypt (8-11) and another one in the State of Pennsylvania on 8-22.

Death Toll in Egypt Train Collision Rises to 41 8-11-2017
https://sputniknews.com/world/201708111056396641-egypt-train-collision-death-toll/

The number of people who died in a two-train collision in the suburbs of the Egyptian city of Alexandria increased to 41, while 179 people were injured, Egypt's Al-Ahram newspaper reported Friday, citing the Health Ministry.

One of the trains was traveling from Cairo, and the other from Port Said. As a result of the collision, several cars derailed and overturned.

According to local authorities, a mistake by the operator of a semaphore caused the accident.

Local media reported that Egypt's Prosecutor-General Nabil Sadiq has ordered an urgent investigation into the collision.


More than 40 people were injured after a regional rail train crashed into another train at a suburban Philadelphia terminal early Tuesday morning, officials said.

Dozens injured in train crash in suburban Philadelphia, officials say 8-22-2017
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/08/22/multiple-injuries-in-high-speed-train-crash-in-suburban-philadelphia-officials-say.html

The crash occurred early around 12:15 a.m. at the 69th Street Terminal as the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority train traveled inbound toward the station in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania.

Rail spokeswoman Heather Redfern told Fox News there were 42 people on board the train at the time of the crash, but none of those on board suffered life-threatening injuries.

In an early morning news briefing, Upper Darby Mayor Nicholas Micozzie said at least four people suffered serious injuries, FOX 29 reported.

One of the victims in critical condition was taken to Penn Presbyterian Hospital, while the other three were taken to Lankenau Hospital, according to Micozzie.

One passenger told reporters that the operator of the train was “all banged up” and the scene was bloody. The train’s operator was treated at the hospital and has since been released, according to FOX 29.

The train line resumed normal operations by the Tuesday morning rush hour, but SEPTA warned commuters there could be continued delays.
 
Another two train collision:

Five people were wounded after passenger train collides with freight train in Austria.

At Least 5 People Injured in Train Collision in Austria’s Linz
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201708241056739380-austria-train-collision-casualties/

At least five people were injured as a result of a train collision in the Austrian northern city of Linz, local media reported Wednesday.

According to the police as quoted by Der Standard newspaper, a passenger Westbahn train crashed into a freight CargoServ train in the rail yard.

The cause of the incident has not been established yet. An investigation is underway.


Monday, August 21st 2017 - SAN AUGUSTINE COUNTY, Texas Freight train derailment

Train derails near FM 1279 in San Augustine County
http://www.ktre.com/story/36181767/train-derails-near-fm-1279-in-san-augustine-county

Numerous rail cars, including tankers, have overturned. A total of 13 cars derailed and overturned, according to a Texas Department of Public Safety press release.

A 2006 Peterbilt log truck that was traveling west on FM 1279 struck the moving train and caused it to derail at about 10:18 a.m. Monday, the press release stated. The driver of the truck has been identified as James Cartwright, 33, of Shelbyville.

Cartwright was taken to San Augustine County Memorial Hospital for treatment of possible injuries.

The SACSO spokesperson also said authorities are dealing with a hazardous spill that has resulted from the derailment. A hazardous materials team cleaning up the scene , and a member of the hazmat team said one of the tanker cars was carrying a liquid called sodium hydroxide, which is the chemical name for lye.

"Three homes were evacuated for safety purposes," the press release stated.

Officials with BNSF, who oversee the freight railroad network, said all of their trains contain a camera which they will use to further the investigation.
 
bjorn said:
Kind of Offtopic, but this left me in awe. Was there seriously no better route to take, and how is this a normal route in anyway? :shock:
[...]
Straight tracks are overrated...

Someone sent me the same thing the other day - almost seems preposterous to even try that locomotive maneuver.

The Dailymail.co.uk - Mailonline backstory states (with photos):

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4708256/Freight-train-rattles-seriously-WONKY-railtrack.html

This nerve-wracking footage shows an enormous freight train rattling along a rickety railtrack that has been left badly warped following years of decay.

The locomotive trundles along the 'rock and roll' metal lines which slope up and down and appear to have bent with the forest land.

The driver can be seen peering out the front window as he carefully manouevres along the track which looks like it is close to coming apart.

Viewers even said they were 'amazed' that the carriage managed to stay on the warped metal without derailing.

According to Scott Taipale, who uploaded the nerve-wracking footage, maintenance on the track has been 'deferred for decades' despite operator Pioneer doing a 'great job rehabbing the worst parts'.

The line stretches between the US states of Indiana and Ohio, where the clip was filmed.

Pioneer has admitted it is 'in dire need of rehabilitation' and started a major renovation project in January 2013.

But the video reveals that some sections of the line still make for a perilous journey.

It has racked up hundreds of thousands of views since being posted online with one commenter joking: 'If they were hauling tank cars of milk they would have butter by the end of the journey.'

Mark Turner added: 'Glad to see the upkeep stopped after the civil war .'

Another viewer said: 'I'm amazed that it doesn't derail, even at that slow of a speed.

Butter indeed. In the Comment section here it said "it's been on youtube for years." - first for me.
 
Two passenger trains collided near the village of Andermatt in Switzerland on Monday, leaving around 30 people injured, Reuters reported citing local police.

Around 30 Wounded as Two Trains Collide in Switzerland
https://sputniknews.com/europe/201709111057285759-30-wounded-train-collision-switzerland/

The Urner Zeitung news outlet said that 27 people were injured as result of the incident that took place in the afternoon.

Police didn't specify how seriously the passengers were wounded but said medical personnel was on the scene.

The train that consisted of a locomotive and five carriages was switching rails at the Andermatt railway station when the incident occurred.

About 100 people were on the train at the moment of the collision.

The Matterhorn-Gotthard-Bahn railway said as quoted by media that a train misfunctions led to the crash.

Police reportedly have closed all routes leading to the village. The Swiss Transportation Safety Investigation Board and Uri Canton police have started an investigation.
 
This may help India with some of it's transportation problems, including it's railway system?

China had initially pitched for the project but the contract was awarded to Japan. Japan has agreed to provide more than 65 per cent of the total cost of over $16 billion to India in the form of easy loans.

India to Get Its First Japanese-Modeled Bullet Train by 2022
https://sputniknews.com/asia/201709121057319420-india-japan-train-bullet/

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and his Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe will lay the foundation stone for India's first high-speed train between Ahmedabad-Mumbai during the latter's visit to India starting Wednesday.

The bullet train is one of the dreams projects of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. The high-speed train will considerably reduce travel time between Ahmedabad and Mumbai which are major commercials hubs. The high-speed train is designed to have ten cars with 750 people capacity and is slated to carry around 36000 passengers every day in a total of 70 rides both sides. The project deadline of 2023 has been preponed to August 2022 to coincide with the 75th year of India's Independence.

India's Railway Minister Piyush Goyal told that the country's rail network would be "transformed and revolutionized with the initiative." Goyal sounded optimistic about the project while claiming that "similar projects in Japan had not seen a single accident. "I am sure the track record will remain the same in India", he added.

The speed of the train is estimated to be around 320 km per hour with 12 stops between the two metropolitan cities. The project will involve elevating a 92 km stretch running atop bridges, 6 per cent will pass through tunnels, and the remaining 2 per cent will run on the ground.
Sanjeev Sinha, alumni of the Indian Institute of Technology and a former employee of India's Tata group of companies in Tokyo has been appointed as adviser for the high-speed rail project by Japan Railways.

A consortium of six companies under the aegis of Japan International Consultants or Japan Railways Group, along with the National High-Speed Rail Corporation, a three-way alliance between the Gujarat and Maharashtra state governments and the urban development ministry of India will be involved in the project.

Meanwhile, the Japanese Prime Minister is visiting India to attend the 12th India-Japan Annual Summit. "Shinzo Abe, Prime Minister of Japan will undertake an official visit to India on September 13-14, during which the two leaders will hold the 12th India-Japan Annual Summit in Ahmadabad/Gandhinagar, Gujarat," a statement from the Ministry of External Affairs said on Monday.

This will be the fourth Annual Summit between Prime Minister Modi and Prime Minister Abe. The two leaders will review the recent progress in the multifaceted cooperation between India and Japan under the framework of their ‘Special Strategic and Global Partnership' and will set its future direction, Ministry added.

Japan is expected to sign as many as 10 memorandums of understandings with India relating to cooperation in different sectors. Japan has also expressed interest in increasing its investment in the state of Gujarat from present $1 billion to $3 billion.
 
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