Philippine Daily Inquirer

PNR rolls out new trains on Dec. 16

2 train sets with 6 coaches each to ply Fti-malabon route

- By Krixia Subingsubi­ng @krixiasinq —RICHARD A. REYES

Two sleek and brand new diesel locomotive­s would be added to the Philippine National Railways (PNR) fleet starting on Dec. 16 as part of the government’s efforts to improve the local train system.

On Wednesday, officials of the Department of Transporta­tion and PNR presided over the unveiling ceremony for the two train sets consisting of six coaches each in Tondo, Manila.

The train sets were part of the 37 coaches ordered by the government from Indonesia for P3.5 billion.

With a capacity of 794, the two trains were expected to add around 18 to 20 trips daily to the Fti-malabon and Tutuban-malabon routes. The trip would take around 58 minutes for a fare of P25.

House transporta­tion committee chair Rep. Edgar Sarmiento, who also attended the ceremony, said it was the first time in 14 years that the Philippine­s was able to purchase brand new trains through the national budget.

The procuremen­t was part of the PNR’S general thrust to improve the reliabilit­y and capacity of the railway system servicing outlying corridors in Manila.

While the PNR was supbefore posed to ferry 250,000 passengers a day given the capacity of its long-haul trains and routes, issues about train reliabilit­y and availabili­ty had plagued the oldest railway system in the country, said PNR general manager Junn Magno.

“Back then (before 2017), we were not even making an impact because we’re just serving 20,000 passengers a day,” Magno said in his speech. “I’ve always been fighting fires; what to do with availabili­ty, what to do with reliabilit­y, but two years ago, we already decided to purchase those trains.”

Now, he stressed, the PNR’S ridership has grown to around 70,000 to 75,000 a day, a significan­t growth that, however, still pales in comparison to the Metro Rail Transit 3’s 350,000 passengers a day.

The new trains were assembled by engineers and craftsmen from PT Inka in Indonesia, Magno said. They used internatio­nal railway standards in the trains’ terms of references.

Indonesian Ambassador to Manila Sinyo Sarundajan­g said the trains symbolized Jakarta’s commitment to supporting President Duterte’s “Build, Build, Build” program.

Just last week, the PNR debuted a fully refurbishe­d 50-year-old train donated by Japan on its Pnr-calamba route.

 ?? Editor Anne Stephanie R. Asuncion ?? WELCOME ADDITION TO THE FLEET A brand new train set, one of two that will start operating on Dec. 16, is unveiled by transporta­tion and Philippine National Railways officials on Wednesday.
Editor Anne Stephanie R. Asuncion WELCOME ADDITION TO THE FLEET A brand new train set, one of two that will start operating on Dec. 16, is unveiled by transporta­tion and Philippine National Railways officials on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines