Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Rys repairs old wagons for faster coal transporta­tion

- Neha LM Tripathi neha.tripathi@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Indian Railways has repaired 2,179 damaged wagons to carry more coal from mines to power plants at a cost of ₹150 crore, officials said, even as an unusually hot summer has led to unpreceden­ted demand for electricit­y that has seen authoritie­s scrambling to build coal inventory at energy utilities to prevent outages.

“With the power crisis and the pressure of transporti­ng coal faster, Indian Railways is continuous­ly working to speed up wagon repairs so that supply of coal to power plants is not affected,” an official of the national transporte­r said on condition of anonymity. “We have set up five new facilities to repair damaged wagons.”

Summer set in early this year in India, and March was the hottest on record. The high temperatur­es are expected to continue through May, the weather bureau has predicted. Peak power demand was a record 191,216 MW on Sunday, and the shortfall was 207 MW. Coalfired plants are the mainstay of electricit­y generation in the country and plants have been short on inventory, leading to a crisis.

Damage to coal wagons has become a cause of concern for the railways ever since private contractor­s hired by power plants started unloading coal using JCBS. This was earlier done manually.

Around ₹5 lakh to ₹10 lakh are spent to repair a coal wagon. “JCBS hit the interior of the wagons, causing serious damage, resulting in a significan­t increase in the number of damaged wagons,” the official said. Railways has so far cancelled 42 passengers trains to make way for coal rakes in the wake of the power crisis. It has increased its average daily loading of coal carrying cargo trains to over 400 everyday, which is the highest in the past five years. A rake has up to 84 wagons. Around 9,982 wagons to carry coal were listed as damaged in January 1, which has been reduced to 7,803 on May 2, official data show.

The railways have been holding meetings with all operating zones to take stock of the situation. “Officials of zones like east coast, east central, west central, and south east central have highlighte­d issues with the movement of coal to power plants,” an official who was present at the meetings said.

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