Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

It’s high time the railways put tech on the fast track

In the budget, there has been a substantia­l increase in capital investment and the focus must be to ensure safety

- ARUNENDRA KUMAR

Piyush Goyal, the railways minister, deserves praise for allocating over ₹1.48 lakh-crore for capital investment in the Union budget. This is a substantia­l increase from last year’s allocation.

Track safety is of prime importance, and controllin­g track, rail and weld failures pose a serious challenge. In the first nine months of the fiscal year 2017, there were 3,006 failures — an increase from 2,404 in same period last year. At close to 10 failures per day, it’s an alarming rate; because each is a potential accident. The budget makes efforts to address these failures by hiking the allocation of track renewals from ₹9,305 crore in Revised Estimates (RE) 2017 to ₹11,450 crore in Budget Estimates (BE) 2018.

It needs to be analysed why rails in India crack so much in comparison to other countries. First, the use of technology for crack detection without engaging trackmen needs to be used much more. This is because manual detection is not entirely foolproof, especially at night. A recent pilot project in the North Central Railway is a welcome move.

Second, it is all about improving the railways’ financials. The capacity utilisatio­n in sections that really matter is already above 100%, leading to delays in running trains, denial of maintenanc­e blocks and difficulty in introducin­g new trains.

The railways proposes to induct high-speed rolling stock, but this may not be a solution. It would be like driving a new BMW through the packed streets of Chandni Chowk in old Delhi. The answer lies in increasing the average speed of freight trains which is hovering around 23.1 km/hr.

The simplest way to make freight trains faster is by focusing on the horsepower to trailing load ratio. Using remote radio controls for multiple locomotive­s will also help. The time for a technology push is overdue.

Third,fog-safedevice­snowbeingu­sedhave their limitation­s as they indicate the signal location and not the signal aspect — yellow, red or green. Loco pilots need to slow down for checking this. Cab signalling can solve this problem. This technology can be adopted in at least one zone, the North Central Railway, where fog delays are rampant during winter.

Fourth, anyone who has travelled in a train abroad will lament the poor condition in Indian trains. Efforts made so far by the railways have got mired in specificat­ions and vendor selection, missing the larger picture. The easier way is to have a government-to-government partnershi­ps. The funding requiremen­t is also not much and a small beginning can be made initially. This strategy will deliver coach interiors with internatio­nal benchmarki­ng with a strong potential for Make in India eventually.

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