The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Face race to avoid tragedies

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can’t nip out next Thursday and fix it, this is decades of work ahead.” He added: “There are all sorts of investigat­ions going on but the problem is the environmen­tal change seems to be happening faster than the scientists can cope with.”

Network Rail is investigat­ing different methods of making tracks safer, including additional drainage, using pins to secure the ground and reshaping embankment­s. Rail lines carrying high-speed trains are likely to be prioritise­d. A Network Rail spokespers­on said: “We’re investing heavily in Scotland’s railway to improve the condition of our earthworks and drainage systems and, between 2014 and 2019, we invested over £120 million on projects around Scotland. In the five years between 2019 and 2024 we plan to invest even more – £149m. “We have been making greater use of weather modelling to forecast rain events and using assets such as our helicopter to help improve how we identify and respond to potential issues, before and after storms. We are also deploying new technologi­es like remote monitoring equipment to improve how we manage earthworks.”

The Rail Accident Investigat­ion Branch is leading the probe into the crash. Driver Brett Mccullough, conductor Donald Dinnie and passenger Christophe­r Stuchbury lost their lives. Data from the train’s black box is likely to have already been recovered, giving the exact time of the crash and the train’s speed. Trains also send similar informatio­n in real time. When it crashed, the train was returning to Aberdeen after being turned back at the Carmont signal box because of a second landslip further south.

It is understood the driver was not travelling at excessive speed when the locomotive hit debris on the track and derailed, sliding 90 metres before hitting a bridge and partially toppling down an embankment. Off-duty conductor Nicola Whyte scrambled from the wreckage and walked more than a mile along the track to raise the alarm.

Investigat­ors will also examine CCTV footage from the crashed train and other services that had passed the scene for clues to whether the area was unsafe.

Chris Milner, editor of Railway Magazine, said: “The investigat­ors will be aided by the fact that trains that went over there previously had forward-facing CCTV cameras. The train, in fact every train in this country, is fitted with a data recorder. “From that they can work out GPS positions, speed, brakes, when the driver opened or closed the regulator to make the train go faster or slower.”

He added: “They can determine all those bits of data and gradually they will piece together the picture of what happened.”

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