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Home > Business > Rail Budget 2003 > Report

Railways plans to install device to prevent collisions

February 26, 2003 14:33 IST

Rattled by a series of train accidents, the Railways plan to install a device to prevent collisions, Railway Minister Nitish Kumar said on Wednesday.

The Anti-Collision Device, an intelligent miro-processor based equipment, has been developed indigenously to prevent collisions, he said presenting the Railway Budget for 2003-04 in the Lok Sabha.

He said the device when installed on locomotives, brake vans and at stations and level crossings gates, would prevent collision of trains.

Kumar said that extended field trials of this device has been successfully completed and deployment of the equipment has already been started on the Indian Railways.

To accelerate the pace of this work, it is proposed to carry out ACD survey of 10,000 route kms and provide ACD over additional 1750 route kms, he said.

The Railway Minister said that concerned over the vital issue of safety, a White Paper covering the entire spectrum of the issues involved in safety in train operations would be presented during the course of the current session of  Parliament.

Stating that one of the major contributing factors for accidents had been found to be human failure, Kumar noted that the filling up of vacancies in safety categories in Group D has assumed importance.

"It has been decided to fill up more than 20,000 such vacancies through Railway Recruitment Boards within the next one year," he said.

Asserting that training played an important role in increasing the efficiency of the employees, he said the Raiwlays was determined to effect continuous improvement in safety related training.

To enable this, training facilities at all Zonal Training Centres, seven Supervisory Training Centres and eight Central Engineering Training Centres were being suitably upgraded.

Modules on Disaster Management are also being prepared, he said and added that new works at a cost of Rs 41 crore (Rs 410 million) were proposed to be taken up.

Kumar said that continuous track circuiting enabled detection of discontinuities caused by rail and weld fracture or acts of sabotage.

This helped in taking timely precautionary measures and prevented possible accidents besides improving the line capacity and safty at level crossing gates, he said.

He also said that for upgrading and modernising the bridge inspection and management systems, action had been taken to initiate underwater inspection, computerised non-desctructive testing with state of the art equipment and introduce a modern Bridge Management System.

The minister said that to minimise injuries during rail travel, coaches were being re-designed without any sharp corners in the interior and duly padding up vulnerable areas.

In order to prevent coaches from cilmbing over each other n the event of a collision, tight lock couplers were being introduced progressively, he said.

Concurrently, redesigning coach ends to take the full impact of the collision has been undertaken so that passenger areas remain free from damage due to collision or heavy impact.

PTI



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