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Latvian Railways

JSC Latvian Railway (Latvian: Latvijas dzelzceļš or LDz) was established on 2 September 1991 and is seen as the successor of the Latvian Railway Board (Latvian Railways) which was established on 5 August 1919.

Latvijas dzelzceļš
TypeState-owned joint-stock company
IndustryTransport, transit, logistics
Headquarters,
Key people
Rinalds Plavnieks (Management board chairman)
RevenueEUR 183,3 million (2019)[1]
EUR 32 430 (2019)[2]
Number of employees
9950 (Group), 6265 (JSC Latvijas dzelzceļš ) as of 31 December 2019.[3]
Websiteldz.lv

Latvijas dzelzceļš is a state-owned company and 100% of its shares are owned by the state. The company’s shareholder is the Ministry of Transport.

Latvijas dzelzceļš is the manager of the public railway infrastructure in Latvia and the controlling company of the Latvijas dzelzceļš Group. The company provides public railway infrastructure, service facility operator (freight wagon assembly handling, wagon maintenance and inspection, maintenance and development of passenger stations and stops), electricity distribution and trade, real estate rental, information technology, electronic communications, as well as other principal services.

The Latvijas dzelzceļš Group includes the parent company – state joint-stock company Latvijas dzelzceļš, and six subsidiaries:

  • SIA LDZ CARGO - operates rail cargo and international passenger transport;
  • SIA LDZ Loģistika - logistics and multimodal transport services company;
  • SIA LDZ Infrastruktūra - infrastructure construction and maintenance company;
  • SIA LDZ Ritošā Sastāva Serviss - rolling stock repair and maintenance company;
  • SIA LDZ Apsardze – security service company;
  • Joint-stock LatRailNet - determines the infrastructure tariff and the allocation of railway infrastructure capacity.

LDz also operates the Latvian Rail History Museum, with exhibitions both in Riga and Jelgava.

Railway history of Latvia edit

 
Upenieki train stop (then - Tukuma apriņķis), 1938

On September 12, 1861, the first independent railway line in the territory of Latvia, which connected Riga with Daugavpils, was handed over for general use. On 15 December 1862, the construction of the railway between St. Petersburg and Warsaw was completed, creating the first railway junction in Daugavpils in the territory of Latvia. By 1880, 800 kilometres (500 mi) of rail-lines were built in Latvia.

In the period up to 1900, in parallel with the construction of new state-funded railways, the previously built private railways were bought out and concentrated within state-run structures. The Riga-Orla Railway Administration becomes the largest railway operator in the territory of Latvia, and 500 kilometres (310 mi) of railway lines have been transferred to its management. The other railways are supervised by the Russian Northwestern Railway and Liepaja – Romna Railway administrations. In 1904, the 1,094-kilometre-long (680 mi) MoscowVentspils railway line was put into operation, a significant part of which – between Zilupe and Ventspils (a length of 456 kilometres (283 mi)), is located in the territory of Latvia. Consequently, all major Latvian ports are connected by railway lines.

At the beginning of the 20th century, large-scale reconstruction works of the Riga railway junction began. New railway stations and connecting lines are built, and a new bridge over the Daugava is constructed. Due to the beginning of the First World War, the reconstruction of the Riga passenger station is not completed.

World War I and the Latvian War of Independence caused significant damage to railway infrastructure, but the total length of railway lines in the four years of the war increased from 1,941 to 2,763 kilometres (1,206 to 1,717 mi), mainly at the expense of military narrow-gauge railways.

After the Proclamation of the Republic of Latvia On 5 August 1919, with the establishment of the Latvian Railway Board, the Latvian state takes over the management of almost all railways located in the territory of Latvia. Narrow gauge railway lines remain in private hands, only one of which continues to be operated by a private legal entity. Since 5 August 1919, the board then operates the state-owned Latvijas dzelzceļi ('Latvijas valsts dzelzceļi', Latvian State Railways) company. It only takes a few years to completely rebuild the railway infrastructure in Latvia. Already in 1925, the construction of new railways are started, stations and trains are modernized, and the Riga passenger station is provided with an electrical interlocking device for switches and signals - the first train safety device of this type in the Baltic States. By 1940, 840-kilometre (520 mi) of new railway lines are built, more than 200 iron bridges are constructed, as well as 130 new station buildings, while infrastructure destroyed during the war was completely restored. The Soviet occupation authorities dissolve the Latvian state railway company on 1 September 1940.[4]

During the Second World War, the Latvian railway network was again severely damaged: most railway bridges and many station buildings were destroyed, and irreversible damage was caused to the tracks, as well as to the communications and signaling facilities.

In the period until 1950, the railway industry was completely revived in key areas and a period of development began, which included electrification of railways on suburban passenger routes, construction of new bridges, transition to diesel cargo trains and long-distance passenger transport, improvement of rolling stock safety, etc. Along with the development of Ventspils port and the USSR industrialization policy in general from the 1960s to 80s, the volume of cargo transportation grows rapidly in the coming years. Electric and diesel trains manufactured in Riga run on all suburban and local traffic routes, serving more and more passengers. Since 1963, the railways of Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania and the Kaliningrad region were supervised by the Baltic Railway Administration (Pribaltiyskaya railway), whose top management was located in Riga.

History of Latvijas dzelzceļš Group edit

 
Latvian Railways logo (1992–2018)

On 1 January 1992, the supervision and operation of all public railways in the territory of Latvia was transferred to the state enterprise Latvijas dzelzceļš . At this moment, the restored Latvian state-owned company has at its disposal 2,364 kilometres (1,469 mi) of railway lines and 23,000 employees.

In 1993, the state enterprise Latvijas dzelzceļš becomes state-owned joint-stock company Latvijas dzelzceļš, whose shares are fully owned by the Latvian state.

In accordance with the restructuring program of the state-owned joint-stock company Latvijas dzelzceļš, the first subsidiary of the Latvijas dzelzceļš Group - Pasažieru Vilciens, was established in 2001 on the basis of the company's structural units Elektrovilciens and Dīzeļvilciens, which has been an independent state-owned joint-stock company since 2008.

In 2003, a subsidiary SIA Dzelzceļa Apsardze was established, which in 2007 was renamed SIA LDZ Apsardze.

In connection with Latvia’s accession to the European Union, based on the restructuring program of the state-owned joint-stock company Latvijas dzelzceļš, the Group's subsidiaries were established in 2005: SIA LDZ Cargo, SIA LDZ Infrastruktūra and SIA LDZ Ritošā Sastāva Serviss.

By separating logistics services from cargo services, in 2008 the subsidiary SIA LDZ Loģistika was established.

In accordance with the amendments to the Law on Railways of the Republic of Latvia, in order to ensure the essential functions of the infrastructure manager within the Latvijas dzelzceļš Group, joint-stock LatRailNet was established in 2010.

The directors of Latvijas Dzelzceļš edit

  • Staņislavs Baiko (from 1991 to 1994)
  • Vitolds Kūliņš (1994)
  • Andris Zorgevics (from 1994 to 2005)
  • Uģis Magonis (from 2005 to 2014)
  • Aivars Strakšas (from 2014 to 2015)
  • Edvīns Bērziņš (from 2015 to 2019)
  • Māris Kleinbergs (from 2019 to 2023)
  • Rinalds Pļavnieks (from 2023)

The main task of Latvijas dzelzceļš in the field of the Group's management is to ensure the development and competitiveness of the Group's business directions, achieving better results than would be possible if each business direction operated separately, while ensuring the operation of subsidiaries in the interests of the national economy.

Corporate policy edit

The mission of the Latvijas dzelzceļš Group is to safely, efficiently and sustainably manage and develop Latvia’s railway infrastructure, while providing competitive railway and logistics services that serve in the interests of the Latvian national economy and society.

The vision of the Latvijas dzelzceļš Group is to become an efficient, competitive company providing high added value to customers by responding flexibly to changes in the transport sector.

Latvijas dzelzceļš is one of the largest employers in Latvia – employees who have been working for the company for several generations are its foundation. A professional team of railwaymen allows the Group to achieve its goals, adapt to market changes and work in conditions of high competition, while ensuring a consistently high level of traffic safety.

Since 2016 Latvijas dzelzceļš has been preparing a sustainability report, which was initially prepared based on the international GRI (Global Reporting Initiative) guidelines, but since 2018 the report has been prepared taking into account the basic requirements of the GRI standard. An independent audit company provides its conclusion on the annual report. All sustainability reports are available at: parskati.ldz.lv.

Domestic routes edit

 
Frequency of commuter trains, 2016

Passenger services are operated by Pasažieru vilciens. The passenger lines with current service are:

Lines where passenger services have been suspended in recent years include:

  • Rīga – Reņģe (Border of Lithuania)
  • Rīga – Ērgļi, the railway was removed
  • Jelgava – Meitene (Border of Lithuania)
  • Jelgava – Krustpils
  • Kārsava (Border of Russia) – Rēzekne – Daugavpils – Zemgale (Border of Lithuania)
  • Eglaine (Border of Lithuania) – Daugavpils – Indra (Border of Belarus), trains continue to Indra twice a week today.

1 Electrified to Tukums 2 Electrified to Jelgava 3 Electrified to Aizkraukle 4 Whole line is electrified

International routes edit

There are rail links with Lithuania and Estonia. LDz trains stop in Valka/Valga and connections to Tartu are available via Estonian operator Elron. Daugavpils is connected to Vilnius by a Lithuanian Railways service at weekends. All international passenger services were suspended in March 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic. Services to Ukraine were not restarted following the pandemic due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and state sanctions against the Belarusian and Russian governments. Overnight services to/from Riga and Russian cities were operated by Latvijas Ekspresis (Latvia Express).

  • RigaŠiauliaiVilniusMinskKyiv (Suspended)
    • Every fourth day overnight service operated with Ukrainian stock
    • Together the two RigaMinsk trains offer connection every other day
  • DaugavpilsVilnius (suspended)
    • Two to three times a day every Saturday and Sunday

Freight services edit

Latvian railways carry a large quantity of freight cargo, and freight trains operate over the whole current passenger network, and a number of lines currently closed to passenger services.

 
All railways with closed lines

Other services edit

There is a narrow gauge railway between Gulbene and Alūksne, operated by the company SIA "Gulbenes - Alūksnes bānītis" under government contract,[5] using Russian and Polish built heritage rolling stock. Three narrow gauge trains a day operate on the 33 kilometres (21 mi) route between the two towns. As of 2019, the service has been extended to two daily trains in both directions.[6]

Rolling stock edit

 
RVR train in Riga.

Diesel locos edit

Freight

  • M62 – 33 locos
  • 2M62 – 40 locos
  • 2M62U – 30 locos[7]
  • 2TE10M – 10 locos
  • 2TE10U – 14 locos

Passenger

Shunt

  • ČME3M, ČME3MB (ChME3) – 57 locos[8]
  • TEM2 – 7 locos
  • TGK2V – 1 loco
  • TGM3 – 1 loco
  • TGM23, TGM23B – 2 locos

EMUs edit

  • ER2 – 32 trains
  • ER2T – 6 trains (7113-7118)
  • ER2M – 1 train (No 605)
  • Škoda Vagonka EMUs – 32 trains ordered[9][10][11]

DMUs edit

  • DR1A – 31 trains
  • DR1AM – 10 trains
  • AR2 (railbus) – 1 train (used by workers on Jelgava-Krustpils line)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ilgtspējas un gada pārskats 2019
  2. ^ Ilgtspējas un gada pārskats 2019
  3. ^ Ilgtspējas un gada pārskats 2019
  4. ^ "Latvijas Republikas valsts uzņēmums "Latvijas dzelzceļi" 1919. – 1940". Latvijas dzelzceļš (in Latvian). 2014-03-10. Retrieved 2022-07-13.
  5. ^ "About Company - Bānītis". www.banitis.lv. Retrieved 2019-12-21.
  6. ^ "Timetable - Bānītis". www.banitis.lv. Retrieved 2019-12-21.
  7. ^ "2M62UM". LDz Ritošā sastāva serviss. 2017-01-30. Retrieved 2019-12-21.
  8. ^ "ČME3M". LDz Ritošā sastāva serviss. 2014-11-19. Retrieved 2019-12-21.
  9. ^ "Latvian EMU order goes to Skoda after tender re-evaluation". International Railway Journal. 2019-02-15. Retrieved 2020-08-29.
  10. ^ "Latvian EMU order finally signed". International Railway Journal. 2019-07-30. Retrieved 2020-08-29.
  11. ^ "ŠKODA VAGONKA WON A CONTRACT FOR THE SUPPLY OF ELECTRIC TRAINS FOR LATVIA | Škoda Transportation a.s." skoda.cz. 2019-07-30. Retrieved 2019-12-21.

External links edit

  • Company homepage

latvian, railways, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, july, 20. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Latvian Railways news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message JSC Latvian Railway Latvian Latvijas dzelzcels or LDz was established on 2 September 1991 and is seen as the successor of the Latvian Railway Board Latvian Railways which was established on 5 August 1919 Latvijas dzelzcelsTypeState owned joint stock companyIndustryTransport transit logisticsHeadquartersRiga LatviaKey peopleRinalds Plavnieks Management board chairman RevenueEUR 183 3 million 2019 1 Net incomeEUR 32 430 2019 2 Number of employees9950 Group 6265 JSC Latvijas dzelzcels as of 31 December 2019 3 Websiteldz wbr lvLatvijas dzelzcels is a state owned company and 100 of its shares are owned by the state The company s shareholder is the Ministry of Transport Latvijas dzelzcels is the manager of the public railway infrastructure in Latvia and the controlling company of the Latvijas dzelzcels Group The company provides public railway infrastructure service facility operator freight wagon assembly handling wagon maintenance and inspection maintenance and development of passenger stations and stops electricity distribution and trade real estate rental information technology electronic communications as well as other principal services The Latvijas dzelzcels Group includes the parent company state joint stock company Latvijas dzelzcels and six subsidiaries SIA LDZ CARGO operates rail cargo and international passenger transport SIA LDZ Logistika logistics and multimodal transport services company SIA LDZ Infrastruktura infrastructure construction and maintenance company SIA LDZ Ritosa Sastava Serviss rolling stock repair and maintenance company SIA LDZ Apsardze security service company Joint stock LatRailNet determines the infrastructure tariff and the allocation of railway infrastructure capacity LDz also operates the Latvian Rail History Museum with exhibitions both in Riga and Jelgava Contents 1 Railway history of Latvia 2 History of Latvijas dzelzcels Group 3 The directors of Latvijas Dzelzcels 4 Corporate policy 5 Domestic routes 6 International routes 7 Freight services 8 Other services 9 Rolling stock 9 1 Diesel locos 9 2 EMUs 9 3 DMUs 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksRailway history of Latvia edit nbsp Upenieki train stop then Tukuma aprinkis 1938On September 12 1861 the first independent railway line in the territory of Latvia which connected Riga with Daugavpils was handed over for general use On 15 December 1862 the construction of the railway between St Petersburg and Warsaw was completed creating the first railway junction in Daugavpils in the territory of Latvia By 1880 800 kilometres 500 mi of rail lines were built in Latvia In the period up to 1900 in parallel with the construction of new state funded railways the previously built private railways were bought out and concentrated within state run structures The Riga Orla Railway Administration becomes the largest railway operator in the territory of Latvia and 500 kilometres 310 mi of railway lines have been transferred to its management The other railways are supervised by the Russian Northwestern Railway and Liepaja Romna Railway administrations In 1904 the 1 094 kilometre long 680 mi Moscow Ventspils railway line was put into operation a significant part of which between Zilupe and Ventspils a length of 456 kilometres 283 mi is located in the territory of Latvia Consequently all major Latvian ports are connected by railway lines At the beginning of the 20th century large scale reconstruction works of the Riga railway junction began New railway stations and connecting lines are built and a new bridge over the Daugava is constructed Due to the beginning of the First World War the reconstruction of the Riga passenger station is not completed World War I and the Latvian War of Independence caused significant damage to railway infrastructure but the total length of railway lines in the four years of the war increased from 1 941 to 2 763 kilometres 1 206 to 1 717 mi mainly at the expense of military narrow gauge railways After the Proclamation of the Republic of Latvia On 5 August 1919 with the establishment of the Latvian Railway Board the Latvian state takes over the management of almost all railways located in the territory of Latvia Narrow gauge railway lines remain in private hands only one of which continues to be operated by a private legal entity Since 5 August 1919 the board then operates the state owned Latvijas dzelzceli Latvijas valsts dzelzceli Latvian State Railways company It only takes a few years to completely rebuild the railway infrastructure in Latvia Already in 1925 the construction of new railways are started stations and trains are modernized and the Riga passenger station is provided with an electrical interlocking device for switches and signals the first train safety device of this type in the Baltic States By 1940 840 kilometre 520 mi of new railway lines are built more than 200 iron bridges are constructed as well as 130 new station buildings while infrastructure destroyed during the war was completely restored The Soviet occupation authorities dissolve the Latvian state railway company on 1 September 1940 4 During the Second World War the Latvian railway network was again severely damaged most railway bridges and many station buildings were destroyed and irreversible damage was caused to the tracks as well as to the communications and signaling facilities In the period until 1950 the railway industry was completely revived in key areas and a period of development began which included electrification of railways on suburban passenger routes construction of new bridges transition to diesel cargo trains and long distance passenger transport improvement of rolling stock safety etc Along with the development of Ventspils port and the USSR industrialization policy in general from the 1960s to 80s the volume of cargo transportation grows rapidly in the coming years Electric and diesel trains manufactured in Riga run on all suburban and local traffic routes serving more and more passengers Since 1963 the railways of Latvia Estonia Lithuania and the Kaliningrad region were supervised by the Baltic Railway Administration Pribaltiyskaya railway whose top management was located in Riga History of Latvijas dzelzcels Group edit nbsp Latvian Railways logo 1992 2018 On 1 January 1992 the supervision and operation of all public railways in the territory of Latvia was transferred to the state enterprise Latvijas dzelzcels At this moment the restored Latvian state owned company has at its disposal 2 364 kilometres 1 469 mi of railway lines and 23 000 employees In 1993 the state enterprise Latvijas dzelzcels becomes state owned joint stock company Latvijas dzelzcels whose shares are fully owned by the Latvian state In accordance with the restructuring program of the state owned joint stock company Latvijas dzelzcels the first subsidiary of the Latvijas dzelzcels Group Pasazieru Vilciens was established in 2001 on the basis of the company s structural units Elektrovilciens and Dizelvilciens which has been an independent state owned joint stock company since 2008 In 2003 a subsidiary SIA Dzelzcela Apsardze was established which in 2007 was renamed SIA LDZ Apsardze In connection with Latvia s accession to the European Union based on the restructuring program of the state owned joint stock company Latvijas dzelzcels the Group s subsidiaries were established in 2005 SIA LDZ Cargo SIA LDZ Infrastruktura and SIA LDZ Ritosa Sastava Serviss By separating logistics services from cargo services in 2008 the subsidiary SIA LDZ Logistika was established In accordance with the amendments to the Law on Railways of the Republic of Latvia in order to ensure the essential functions of the infrastructure manager within the Latvijas dzelzcels Group joint stock LatRailNet was established in 2010 The directors of Latvijas Dzelzcels editStanislavs Baiko from 1991 to 1994 Vitolds Kulins 1994 Andris Zorgevics from 1994 to 2005 Ugis Magonis from 2005 to 2014 Aivars Straksas from 2014 to 2015 Edvins Berzins from 2015 to 2019 Maris Kleinbergs from 2019 to 2023 Rinalds Plavnieks from 2023 The main task of Latvijas dzelzcels in the field of the Group s management is to ensure the development and competitiveness of the Group s business directions achieving better results than would be possible if each business direction operated separately while ensuring the operation of subsidiaries in the interests of the national economy Corporate policy editThe mission of the Latvijas dzelzcels Group is to safely efficiently and sustainably manage and develop Latvia s railway infrastructure while providing competitive railway and logistics services that serve in the interests of the Latvian national economy and society The vision of the Latvijas dzelzcels Group is to become an efficient competitive company providing high added value to customers by responding flexibly to changes in the transport sector Latvijas dzelzcels is one of the largest employers in Latvia employees who have been working for the company for several generations are its foundation A professional team of railwaymen allows the Group to achieve its goals adapt to market changes and work in conditions of high competition while ensuring a consistently high level of traffic safety Since 2016 Latvijas dzelzcels has been preparing a sustainability report which was initially prepared based on the international GRI Global Reporting Initiative guidelines but since 2018 the report has been prepared taking into account the basic requirements of the GRI standard An independent audit company provides its conclusion on the annual report All sustainability reports are available at parskati ldz lv Domestic routes edit nbsp Frequency of commuter trains 2016Passenger services are operated by Pasazieru vilciens The passenger lines with current service are Tornakalns Tukums II Railway1 Riga Jelgava Railway2 Jelgava Liepaja Railway 8 times a week per direction Riga Daugavpils Railway3 5 times a day Krustpils Rezekne Zilupe border of Russia Two trains a day from Riga continue past Krustpils on this diesel train line in Latvia s central and eastern countryside as well as the daily service from Riga to Moscow Riga Sigulda Cesis Valmiera Valga in Estonia Leaving the Riga Central Station this branch includes neighborhood stations Zemitani Ciekurkalns and Jugla During Soviet times electric trains went up to Sigulda but the service is now diesel Sigulda has around 11 trains a day Cesis 6 Valmiera 4 and 2 trains a day continue the full length of the line to serve the Latvian Estonian border towns of Valka and Valga through a joint station in Valga Zemitani Skulte Railway4 Plavinas GulbeneLines where passenger services have been suspended in recent years include Riga Renge Border of Lithuania Riga Ergli the railway was removed Jelgava Meitene Border of Lithuania Jelgava Krustpils Karsava Border of Russia Rezekne Daugavpils Zemgale Border of Lithuania Eglaine Border of Lithuania Daugavpils Indra Border of Belarus trains continue to Indra twice a week today 1 Electrified to Tukums 2 Electrified to Jelgava 3 Electrified to Aizkraukle 4 Whole line is electrifiedInternational routes editThere are rail links with Lithuania and Estonia LDz trains stop in Valka Valga and connections to Tartu are available via Estonian operator Elron Daugavpils is connected to Vilnius by a Lithuanian Railways service at weekends All international passenger services were suspended in March 2020 during the coronavirus pandemic Services to Ukraine were not restarted following the pandemic due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 and state sanctions against the Belarusian and Russian governments Overnight services to from Riga and Russian cities were operated by Latvijas Ekspresis Latvia Express Riga Siauliai Vilnius Minsk Kyiv Suspended Every fourth day overnight service operated with Ukrainian stock Together the two Riga Minsk trains offer connection every other day Daugavpils Vilnius suspended Two to three times a day every Saturday and SundayFreight services editLatvian railways carry a large quantity of freight cargo and freight trains operate over the whole current passenger network and a number of lines currently closed to passenger services nbsp All railways with closed linesOther services editThere is a narrow gauge railway between Gulbene and Aluksne operated by the company SIA Gulbenes Aluksnes banitis under government contract 5 using Russian and Polish built heritage rolling stock Three narrow gauge trains a day operate on the 33 kilometres 21 mi route between the two towns As of 2019 the service has been extended to two daily trains in both directions 6 Rolling stock edit nbsp RVR train in Riga This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2012 Learn how and when to remove this template message Diesel locos edit Freight M62 33 locos 2M62 40 locos 2M62U 30 locos 7 2TE10M 10 locos 2TE10U 14 locosPassenger TEP70 15 locosShunt CME3M CME3MB ChME3 57 locos 8 TEM2 7 locos TGK2V 1 loco TGM3 1 loco TGM23 TGM23B 2 locosEMUs edit ER2 32 trains ER2T 6 trains 7113 7118 ER2M 1 train No 605 Skoda Vagonka EMUs 32 trains ordered 9 10 11 DMUs edit DR1A 31 trains DR1AM 10 trains AR2 railbus 1 train used by workers on Jelgava Krustpils line See also edit nbsp Trains portal nbsp Latvia portalHistory of rail transport in Latvia Rail transport in Latvia Transport in LatviaReferences edit Ilgtspejas un gada parskats 2019 Ilgtspejas un gada parskats 2019 Ilgtspejas un gada parskats 2019 Latvijas Republikas valsts uznemums Latvijas dzelzceli 1919 1940 Latvijas dzelzcels in Latvian 2014 03 10 Retrieved 2022 07 13 About Company Banitis www banitis lv Retrieved 2019 12 21 Timetable Banitis www banitis lv Retrieved 2019 12 21 2M62UM LDz Ritosa sastava serviss 2017 01 30 Retrieved 2019 12 21 CME3M LDz Ritosa sastava serviss 2014 11 19 Retrieved 2019 12 21 Latvian EMU order goes to Skoda after tender re evaluation International Railway Journal 2019 02 15 Retrieved 2020 08 29 Latvian EMU order finally signed International Railway Journal 2019 07 30 Retrieved 2020 08 29 SKODA VAGONKA WON A CONTRACT FOR THE SUPPLY OF ELECTRIC TRAINS FOR LATVIA Skoda Transportation a s skoda cz 2019 07 30 Retrieved 2019 12 21 External links editCompany homepage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Latvian Railways amp oldid 1193215974, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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