China Daily

‘Serious’ crack found on Japan train

-

TOKYO — Train operator West Japan Railway Co said on Tuesday that a 16-centimeter crack found in a steel frame of a carriage of a shinkansen bullet train was “extremely serious”.

The recent woes that have gripped Japan’s train networks are due to structural issues related to aging equipment as well as a lack of young engineers, said Transport Minister Keiichi Ishii on Tuesday.

His comments came a week after a shinkansen bullet train was pulled out of service three and half hours into its fivehour journey because of a crack in an undercarri­age and an oil leak.

The steel frame of the undercarri­age was just 3 cm away from snapping into two, train operator West Japan Railway Company said on Tuesday, admitting that this could have caused a major high-speed derailment.

This was the shinkansen’s first serious safety breach in over 50 years.

In another incident on Saturday, three train services in Yokohama were suspended for as long as seven hours after an overhead wire snapped.

“Besides structural complicati­ons in the aging equipment, contributi­ng to the spate of recent incidents is the increasing lack of young engineers who want to do such jobs,” Ishii said.

He added that an expert panel will look into how to combat the structural problems and how to woo more young engineers.

Public broadcaste­r NHK, quoting sources, reported on Tuesday that 348 billion yen ($3 billion) will be allocated to the maintenanc­e of the shinkansen in the next Budget.

The works will center on three major lines in Hokkaido, Kyushu and Hokuriku.

Meanwhile, the two train operators responsibl­e for the recent service disruption­s have apologized to the public. JR West Executive Vice-President Norihiko Yoshie said that the incident has “betrayed the absolute trust in the safety of the shinkansen”.

JR West runs the shinkansen service Nozomi 34 that was pulled out of service on Dec 11 on its way from Hakata station in Fukuoka to the Tokyo station. The train would have covered the Osaka-Tokyo route, which is Japan’s busiest.

Yoshie said there was a 16 cm crack in the base of the steel frame of the undercarri­age, which also had 14 cm-long damage on both sides. It was manufactur­ed by Kawasaki Heavy Industries in 2007.

An inspection the night before the incident had not yielded any irregulari­ties, he added.

The train was grounded only three hours after the first red flag — a burning smell — was sounded by the conductor.

Separately, the East Japan Railway Company apologized for Saturday’s incident, after the overhead wire snapped at about 10:55 am local time. Full service resumed only at 5:40 pm — and passengers had to disembark from the trains and walk along the tracks.

 ?? SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Passengers climb aboard the Shinkansen high-speed train at Tokyo station in the Japanese capital.
SHIZUO KAMBAYASHI / ASSOCIATED PRESS Passengers climb aboard the Shinkansen high-speed train at Tokyo station in the Japanese capital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong