The Asian Age

New trains are ‘ too wide’ for French stations

-

Paris, May 21: Cashstrapp­ed France will have to trim back some 1,300 rail platforms at a cost of 50 million euros after realising a brand new fleet of trains are too big to fit its stations, rail operators admitted on Wednesday.

France’s secretary of state for transport, Frederic Cuvillier, called it a “tragically comical”, “mind- boggling” mix- up, blaming a lack of coordinati­on between France’s two state rail bodies, the SNCF and the RFF.

The Societe Nationale des Chemins de Fer ( SNCF) and the Reseau Ferre de France ( RFF), acknowledg­ed the embarrassi­ng situation in a joint statement on Wednesday after it was revealed by satirical weekly Le Canard Enchaine. Introducin­g “wider trains in response to the needs of the public requires us to modernise 1,300 of the 8,700 platforms in the French rail network,” they said.

According to the Canard Enchaine , the SNCF drew up the spec- ifications for the newgenerat­ion trains, including the carriage width. “But the SNCF’s clever engineers forgot to check on the reality on the ground,” where the space between platforms varies between stations, it said.

The problem affects 182 regional trains supplied by French manufactur­er Alstom and 159 from Canada’s Bombardier, due to come into service by 2016.

So far, 300 station platforms have been adapted since work began in 2013, with the project set for completion in 2016. “It can involve chipping a few centimetre­s off the edge of a platform, or moving an electricit­y power box located a bit too close to the platform edge,” said RFF.

“It’s a bit like buying a Ferrari that you want to fit into your garage, but then realising your garage isn’t quite Ferrari- sized, because up until now you didn’t own a Ferrari,” it offered by way of analogy. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India