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Rail transport in Russia

Rail transport in Russia runs on one of the biggest railway networks in the world. Russian railways are the third longest by length and third by volume of freight hauled, after the railways of the United States and China. In overall density of operations (freight ton-kilometers + passenger-kilometers)/length of track, Russia is second only to China. Rail transport in Russia has been described as one of the economic wonders of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.[1]

The most important railway lines of Russia.

JSC Russian Railways has a near-monopoly on long-distance train travel in Russia, with a 98.6% market share in 2017.[2] Independent long-distance carriers include Grand Service Express TC, Tverskoy Express, TransClassService, Sakhalin Passenger Company, Kuzbass Suburb, and Yakutian Railway.[2]

Characteristics Edit

Russia is larger than both the United States and China in terms of total land area, therefore its rail density (rail tracking/country area) is lower compared to those two countries. Since Russia's population density is also much lower than that of China and the United States, the Russian railways carry freight and passengers over very long distances, often through vast, nearly empty spaces. Coal and coke make up almost one-third of the freight traffic and have average hauls of around 1,500 kilometers, while ferrous metals make up another 10 percent of freight traffic and travel an average of over 1,900 kilometers. Railroads are often key to getting supplies shipped to remote parts of the country as many people do not have access to other reliable means of shipping.

Like most railways, rail transport in Russia carries both freight and passengers. It is one of the most freight-dominant railways in the world, behind only Canada, the United States, and Estonia in the ratio of freight ton-kilometers to passenger-kilometers. However, per head of population intercity passenger travel is far greater than the United States (which has the lowest long-distance passenger train usages in the developed world).

Structure Edit

Russia's railways are divided into seventeen regional railways, from the October Railway serving the St. Petersburg region to the Far Eastern Railway serving Vladivostok, with the free-standing Kaliningrad and Sakhalin Railways on either end. The regional railways were closely coordinated by the Ministry of the Means of Communication until 2003, and the Joint Stock Company Russian Railways since then – including the pooling and redistribution of revenues. This has been crucial to two long-standing policies of cross-subsidization: to passenger operations from freight revenues, and to coal shipments from other freight.

History Edit

 
Russian locomotive class U – U-127 Lenin's 4-6-0 oil burning compound locomotive, currently preserved at the Museum of the Moscow Railway at Paveletsky Rail Terminal

The Russian railways were a collection of mostly privately owned and operated companies during most of the 19th century, though many had been constructed with heavy government involvement and financing. The tsarist government began mobilizing and nationalizing the rail system as World War I approached, and the new communist government finished the nationalization process. With the dissolution of the USSR in 1991, the Russian Federation was left with three-fifths of the railway track of the Union as well as nine-tenths of the highway mileage – though only two-fifths of the port capacity.

In the 21st century, substantial changes in the Russian railways have been discussed and implemented in the context of two government reform documents: Decree No. 384 of 18 May 2001 of the Government of the Russian Federation, "A Program for Structural Reform of Railway Transport", and Order No. 877 of 17 June 2008 of the Government of the Russian Federation, "The Strategy for Railway Development in the Russian Federation to 2030". The former focused on restructuring the railways from government-owned monopoly to private competitive sector; the latter focused on ambitious plans for equipment modernization and network expansion.

Timeline of railway implementation Edit

1837 – the Tsarskoye Selo Railway (27 km);

1843 – Inkerman Railway (about one km);

1848 – the Warsaw-Vienna Railway (800 km);

1851 – Nikolaevskaya railway (645 km);

1854 — Connecting Line (4,73 km), first trans-line connector to form the future network;

1855 – The Balaklava Railway (about 23 km);

1861 – the Riga-Dinaburg railway (218 km);

1862 – the Petersburg-Warsaw Railway (1116 km);

1862 – the Moscow-Nizhny Novgorod railway (437 km);

1868 – Moscow-Kursk railway (543 km);

1870 – Yaroslavl Railway;

1878 – the Ural Mining and Railroads (by 1880–715 km);

1884 – Catherine (Krivorog (g)) railway) (by 1884–523 km);

1890 – Samara-Zlatoust railway (1888 – Samara-Ufa, by 1893 about 1500 km);

1898 – the Perm-Kotlas railway;

1900 – The Ussuri railway (964 km);

1900 – the Moscow-Savyolovo line;

1903 – the Sino-Eastern Railway (Manchurian, Chinese Changchun, Harbin);

1905 – Trans-Baikal Railway; The Circum-Baikal Railway; Petersburg-Vologda railway;

1906 – Theological Railway; The Tashkent railway;

1908 – Little Ring of the Moscow Railway;

1915 – the Altai Railway;

1916 – the Amur Railway; The Volga-Bugulma Railway; West-Ural railway; The Moscow-Kazan railway; North-Eastern Ural Railway; The Trans-Siberian Railway (historical part);

1926 – the Achinsk-Minusinsk railway;

1930 – the Turkestan-Siberian Railway;

1936 – 1937 – Norilsk Railway;

1940 – Kanash–Cheboksary;

1944 – The Big Ring of the Moscow Railway;

1969 – the line of Verbilki–Dubna;

1978 – Rostov-Krasnodar–Tuapse; Yurovsky–Anapa;

2003 – the Baikal–Amur Mainline;

2013 – Adler–Rosa Farm;

2016 – Moscow Central Circle (based on Little Ring of the Moscow Railway);

2017 – The railway line bypassing Ukraine;

2017 – the Amur–Yakutsk railway;

2019 – Railway bridge to the Crimea;

Statistics Edit

Russian Railways accounts for 2.5%[3] of Russia's GDP and employs 800,000 people.[4] The percentage of passenger traffic that goes by rail is unknown, since no statistics are available for private transportation such as private automobiles. In 2007, about 1.3 billion passengers[5] and 1.3 billion tons of freight[6] went via Russian Railways. In 2007 the company owned 19,700[citation needed] goods and passenger locomotives, 24,200 passenger cars (carriages) (2007) and 526,900 freight cars (goods wagons) (2007).[7] A further 270,000 freight cars in Russia are privately owned[citation needed].

In 2009 Russia had 128,000 kilometers of common-carrier railway line, of which about half is electrified and carries most of the traffic, over 40% was double track or better.[8][9]

In 2013 railways carried nearly 90% of Russia's freight, excluding pipelines.[10][11]

Industrial railways Edit

Besides the common-carrier railways that are well covered by government statistics there are many industrial railways (such as mining or lumbering railways) whose statistics are covered separately, and which in 1981 had a total length almost equal to the length of the common carrier railways.[12][13] Currently (2008) they are only about half the length of the common-carrier system.[14] In 1980, about two-thirds of their freight flowed to and from the common-carrier railroads while the remaining third was internal transport only on an industrial railways.[15] (For example, a lumber company uses its private industrial railways to transport logs from a forest to its sawmill.) About 4% of the industrial railway traffic was on track jointly "owned" by two companies.

Narrow-gauge railways Edit

In 1981, there were 33,400 kilometers of narrow gauge.

Railway infrastructure Edit

Couplers Edit

The SA3 coupler[16] (Soviet Automatic coupler, model 3) used in Russia has several advantages over the Janney coupler used in the United States.[17]

The SA3 coupler, while well-designed, has had problems with operating due to being made with lower quality steel, having a low quality of maintenance/repairs/rebuilding, and coupling cars at speeds higher than allowed by the rules.[18]

Track gauge Edit

The majority of Russia's rail network uses the 1,520 mm Russian gauge, which includes all metro systems and the majority of tram networks in the country.

The Sakhalin Railway, on Sakhalin Island used 1,067 mm Cape gauge from its construction under Japan until 2019, when the conversion to 1520 mm completed.

A section from the Poland–Russia border to Kaliningrad, uses the 1,435 mm Standard gauge. Unlike the Sakhalin Railway, which carries freight and passengers, the standard-gauge line in Kaliningrad carries only freight at this time.

Kaliningrad's tram network also uses metre-gauge tracks at 1,000 mm, as does Stavropol krai's Pyatigorsk network.

Railway universities Edit

There are many railway colleges in Russia which are higher educational institutes that train students for railway careers, mainly in engineering.

Command and control system Edit

Since 2010 Russian Railways had started an overhaul of its computer systems. The overhaul will centralize the management of data into new computing hubs, restructure the collection of information on the railway's field operations, and integrate new automation software to help the railway strategise how to deploy its assets. The geriatric machines that the new mainframes will replace include Soviet-built clones of IBM's Cold War–era computers, called ES EVM (the transliterated Russian acronym for "unified system of electronic computing machines").[19]

Foreign activities Edit

The RZD operates the Armenian Railway until 2038. During this period, at least 570 million euro will be invested, 90% going into infrastructure.[20]

Joint ventures have been formed to build and operate a port in Rasŏn in North Korea, and rail links connecting that port to the Russian rail network at the North Korean-Russian border Khasan-Tumangang.[21]

Trans-Eurasia Logistics is a joint venture with RZD that operates container freight trains between Germany and China via Russia.

Rail links with adjacent countries Edit

Voltage of electrification systems not necessarily compatible.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Intro adapted from Russell Pittman, "Blame the Switchman? Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years," working paper, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 2011. Blame the Switchman? Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years
  2. ^ a b "Passenger transportation" (PDF). Concise Annual Report 2017. Russian Railways. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
  3. ^ Lenta.RU News "РЖД попросила правительство заняться спасением железных дорог" (in Russian) (RZD asks government to rescue the railway)
  4. ^ "The gauge of history". The Economist.
  5. ^ Table 2.28. ПЕРЕВОЗКИ ПАССАЖИРОВ И ПАССАЖИРООБОРОТ ЖЕЛЕЗНОДОРОЖНОГО ТРАНСПОРТА ОБЩЕГО ПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ; TRANSPORTATION OF PASSENGERS AND PASSENGER TURNOVER OF PUBLIC RAILWAY TRANSPORT 2013-05-25 at the Wayback Machine Основные показатели транспортной деятельности в России – 2008 г. Copyright © Федеральная служба государственной статистики
  6. ^ Table 2.25. ПЕРЕВОЗКИ ГРУЗОВ И ГРУЗООБОРОТ ЖЕЛЕЗНОДОРОЖНОГО ТРАНСПОРТА ОБЩЕГО ПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ TRANSPORTATION OF CARGO AND FREIGHT TURNOVER OF PUBLIC RAILWAY TRANSPORT 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine Основные показатели транспортной деятельности в России – 2008 г. Copyright © Федеральная служба государственной статистики
  7. ^ Table 2.24. НАЛИЧИЕ ПОДВИЖНОГО СОСТАВА ЖЕЛЕЗНОДОРОЖНОГО ТРАНСПОРТА ОБЩЕГО ПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ; PUBLIC RAILWAY ROLLING STOCK AND ITS USE 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Основные показатели транспортной деятельности в России – 2008 г. Copyright © Федеральная служба государственной статистики
  8. ^ ПРОТЯЖЕННОСТЬ ЭКСПЛУАТАЦИОННЫХ ПУТЕЙ ЖЕЛЕЗНОДОРОЖНОГО ТРАНСПОРТА ОБЩЕГО ПОЛЬЗОВАНИЯ [Lengths of railway lines] (in Russian). Table 2.13.
  9. ^ Freight by electric railroad 2008 (in Russian)
  10. ^ Chris Lo (1 May 2013). "Russian railways: connecting a growing economy". railway-technology.com. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  11. ^ Courtney Weaver (17 June 2013). "Russian rail freight proves a worthy investment". Financial Times. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  12. ^ Плакс, p.5 (in Russian)
  13. ^ Рeзер p. 5 (in Russian)
  14. ^ Industrial Railroad Statistics (in Russian)
  15. ^ Рeзер pp. 25-6 (in Russian)
  16. ^ филиппов 1981 pp. 18–14. Филиппов 1991 пп. 152-4 (in Russian); See also Шадур 1980, Chapt. X: Ударно-тяговые приборы (couplers and draft gears) (in Russian)
  17. ^ George R. Cockle (editor) "Car and locomotive cyclopedia of American practices" (3rd edition), Simmons-Boardman Pub. Corp., New York, 1974. p. S8-1 (Section 8: Couplers). Note that the SA3 is a Willison type coupler.
  18. ^ Костина, Н.А. +, "Предупреждение разрывов поездов" (Preventing trains from breaking in two) ЖТ 10-1988 pp. 41-2 (and another article from ЖТ -date unknown)
  19. ^ IEEE Spectrum's special report: Winners & Losers VII: IBM overhauls Russian Railways' software infrastructure, p. 123 By Sandria Upson, Jan. 2010. Full text :[1]
  20. ^ Eurailpress: RZD gewinnt Ausschreibung in Armenien
  21. ^ "Railway Gazette: Rajin port accord". Retrieved 2010-10-30.

Further reading Edit

In English Edit

  • Boublikoff, A.A. "A suggestion for railroad reform" in book: Buehler, E.C. (editor) "Government ownership of railroads", Annual debater's help book (vol. VI), New York, Noble and Noble, 1939; pp. 309–318. Original in journal "North American Review, vol. 237, pp. 346+. (Title is misleading. It's 90% about Russian railways.)
  • European Conference of Ministers of Transport, "Regulatory Reform of Railways in Russia," 2004.
  • Hunter, Holland "Soviet transport experience: Its lessons for other countries", Brookings Institution 1968.
  • Omrani, Bijan. Asia Overland: Tales of Travel on the Trans-Siberian and Silk Road Odyssey Publications, 2010 ISBN 962-217-811-1
  • Pittman, Russell, "Blame the Switchman? Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years," working paper, Antitrust Division, U.S. Department of Justice, 2011. Blame the Switchman? Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years
  • "Railroad Facts" (Yearbook) Association of American Railroads, Washington, DC (annual).
  • "Transportation in America", Statistical Analysis of Transportation in the United States (18th edition), with historical compendium 1939–1999, by Rosalyn A. Wilson, pub. by Eno Transportation Foundation Inc., Washington DC, 2001. See table: Domestic Intercity Ton-Miles by Mode, pp. 12–13.
  • UN (United Nations) Statistical Yearbook. The earlier editions were designated by date (such as 1985/86) but later editions use the edition number (such as 51st). After 1985/86 the "World railway traffic" table was dropped.After the 51st ? edition, the long table: "Railways: traffic" was dropped resulting in no more UN railway statistics.
  • Urba CE, "The railroad situation : a perspective on the present, past and future of the U.S. railroad industry". Washington : Dept. of Transportation, Federal Railroad Administration, Office of Policy and Program Development Govt. Print. Off., 1978.
  • VanWinke, Jenette and Zycher, Benjamin; "Future Soviet Investment in Transportation, Energy, and Environmental Protection" A Rand Note. The Rand Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, 1992.
  • Westwood J.N, 2002 "Soviet Railways to Russian Railways" Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Ward, Christopher J., "Brezhnev's Folly: The Building of BAM and Late Soviet Socialism", University of Pittsburgh Press, 2009.

In Russian Edit

  • Плакс, А.В. & Пупынин, В.Н. Электрические железные дороги (Electric Railroads). Москва, Транспорт, 1993.
  • Резер, С.М. Взаимодействие транспортных систем. Москва, Наука, 1985.
  • Шадур, Л.А. (editor). Вагоны: конструкция, теория и расчёт (Railroad cars: construction, theory and calculations). Москва, Транспорт, 1980.
  • Фед = Федеральная служба государственной статистики (Federal government statistical service). Транспорт в России (Transportation in Russia) (annual) .
  • Филиппов, М.М. (editor). Железные Дороги. Общий Курс (Railroads. General Course). Москва, Транспорт, 3rd ed. 1981. (4th ed. 1991 with new editor: Уздин, М.М.).
  • Шафиркин, Б.И. Единая Транспортная Система СССР и взаимодействие различных видов транспорта (Unified Transportation System of the USSR and interaction of various modes of transportation). Москва, Высшая школа, 1983.
  • Шадур. Л. А. (editor). Вагоны (Railway cars). Москва, Транспорт, 1980.

External links Edit

  • (in English and Russian)
  • Steam on Sakhalin Island [2]
  • Russian Railway in 1935
  • "A site about railways in C.I.S. and Baltics". Archived from the original on 4 December 2012.
  • Rail Fan Europe
  • "Rail map of former Soviet Union". Archived from the original on 4 January 2013. Shows electrification status and also many Industrial railways.

rail, transport, russia, runs, biggest, railway, networks, world, russian, railways, third, longest, length, third, volume, freight, hauled, after, railways, united, states, china, overall, density, operations, freight, kilometers, passenger, kilometers, lengt. Rail transport in Russia runs on one of the biggest railway networks in the world Russian railways are the third longest by length and third by volume of freight hauled after the railways of the United States and China In overall density of operations freight ton kilometers passenger kilometers length of track Russia is second only to China Rail transport in Russia has been described as one of the economic wonders of the 19th 20th and 21st centuries 1 The most important railway lines of Russia JSC Russian Railways has a near monopoly on long distance train travel in Russia with a 98 6 market share in 2017 2 Independent long distance carriers include Grand Service Express TC Tverskoy Express TransClassService Sakhalin Passenger Company Kuzbass Suburb and Yakutian Railway 2 Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Structure 3 History 3 1 Timeline of railway implementation 4 Statistics 5 Industrial railways 6 Narrow gauge railways 7 Railway infrastructure 7 1 Couplers 7 2 Track gauge 8 Railway universities 9 Command and control system 10 Foreign activities 11 Rail links with adjacent countries 12 See also 13 References 14 Further reading 14 1 In English 14 2 In Russian 15 External linksCharacteristics EditRussia is larger than both the United States and China in terms of total land area therefore its rail density rail tracking country area is lower compared to those two countries Since Russia s population density is also much lower than that of China and the United States the Russian railways carry freight and passengers over very long distances often through vast nearly empty spaces Coal and coke make up almost one third of the freight traffic and have average hauls of around 1 500 kilometers while ferrous metals make up another 10 percent of freight traffic and travel an average of over 1 900 kilometers Railroads are often key to getting supplies shipped to remote parts of the country as many people do not have access to other reliable means of shipping Like most railways rail transport in Russia carries both freight and passengers It is one of the most freight dominant railways in the world behind only Canada the United States and Estonia in the ratio of freight ton kilometers to passenger kilometers However per head of population intercity passenger travel is far greater than the United States which has the lowest long distance passenger train usages in the developed world Structure EditMain article List of railway lines in Russia Russia s railways are divided into seventeen regional railways from the October Railway serving the St Petersburg region to the Far Eastern Railway serving Vladivostok with the free standing Kaliningrad and Sakhalin Railways on either end The regional railways were closely coordinated by the Ministry of the Means of Communication until 2003 and the Joint Stock Company Russian Railways since then including the pooling and redistribution of revenues This has been crucial to two long standing policies of cross subsidization to passenger operations from freight revenues and to coal shipments from other freight History EditMain article History of rail transport in Russia nbsp Russian locomotive class U U 127 Lenin s 4 6 0 oil burning compound locomotive currently preserved at the Museum of the Moscow Railway at Paveletsky Rail TerminalThe Russian railways were a collection of mostly privately owned and operated companies during most of the 19th century though many had been constructed with heavy government involvement and financing The tsarist government began mobilizing and nationalizing the rail system as World War I approached and the new communist government finished the nationalization process With the dissolution of the USSR in 1991 the Russian Federation was left with three fifths of the railway track of the Union as well as nine tenths of the highway mileage though only two fifths of the port capacity In the 21st century substantial changes in the Russian railways have been discussed and implemented in the context of two government reform documents Decree No 384 of 18 May 2001 of the Government of the Russian Federation A Program for Structural Reform of Railway Transport and Order No 877 of 17 June 2008 of the Government of the Russian Federation The Strategy for Railway Development in the Russian Federation to 2030 The former focused on restructuring the railways from government owned monopoly to private competitive sector the latter focused on ambitious plans for equipment modernization and network expansion Timeline of railway implementation Edit 1837 the Tsarskoye Selo Railway 27 km 1843 Inkerman Railway about one km 1848 the Warsaw Vienna Railway 800 km 1851 Nikolaevskaya railway 645 km 1854 Connecting Line 4 73 km first trans line connector to form the future network 1855 The Balaklava Railway about 23 km 1861 the Riga Dinaburg railway 218 km 1862 the Petersburg Warsaw Railway 1116 km 1862 the Moscow Nizhny Novgorod railway 437 km 1868 Moscow Kursk railway 543 km 1870 Yaroslavl Railway 1878 the Ural Mining and Railroads by 1880 715 km 1884 Catherine Krivorog g railway by 1884 523 km 1890 Samara Zlatoust railway 1888 Samara Ufa by 1893 about 1500 km 1898 the Perm Kotlas railway 1900 The Ussuri railway 964 km 1900 the Moscow Savyolovo line 1903 the Sino Eastern Railway Manchurian Chinese Changchun Harbin 1905 Trans Baikal Railway The Circum Baikal Railway Petersburg Vologda railway 1906 Theological Railway The Tashkent railway 1908 Little Ring of the Moscow Railway 1915 the Altai Railway 1916 the Amur Railway The Volga Bugulma Railway West Ural railway The Moscow Kazan railway North Eastern Ural Railway The Trans Siberian Railway historical part 1926 the Achinsk Minusinsk railway 1930 the Turkestan Siberian Railway 1936 1937 Norilsk Railway 1940 Kanash Cheboksary 1944 The Big Ring of the Moscow Railway 1969 the line of Verbilki Dubna 1978 Rostov Krasnodar Tuapse Yurovsky Anapa 2003 the Baikal Amur Mainline 2013 Adler Rosa Farm 2016 Moscow Central Circle based on Little Ring of the Moscow Railway 2017 The railway line bypassing Ukraine 2017 the Amur Yakutsk railway 2019 Railway bridge to the Crimea Statistics EditRussian Railways accounts for 2 5 3 of Russia s GDP and employs 800 000 people 4 The percentage of passenger traffic that goes by rail is unknown since no statistics are available for private transportation such as private automobiles In 2007 about 1 3 billion passengers 5 and 1 3 billion tons of freight 6 went via Russian Railways In 2007 the company owned 19 700 citation needed goods and passenger locomotives 24 200 passenger cars carriages 2007 and 526 900 freight cars goods wagons 2007 7 A further 270 000 freight cars in Russia are privately owned citation needed In 2009 Russia had 128 000 kilometers of common carrier railway line of which about half is electrified and carries most of the traffic over 40 was double track or better 8 9 In 2013 railways carried nearly 90 of Russia s freight excluding pipelines 10 11 Industrial railways EditBesides the common carrier railways that are well covered by government statistics there are many industrial railways such as mining or lumbering railways whose statistics are covered separately and which in 1981 had a total length almost equal to the length of the common carrier railways 12 13 Currently 2008 they are only about half the length of the common carrier system 14 In 1980 about two thirds of their freight flowed to and from the common carrier railroads while the remaining third was internal transport only on an industrial railways 15 For example a lumber company uses its private industrial railways to transport logs from a forest to its sawmill About 4 of the industrial railway traffic was on track jointly owned by two companies Narrow gauge railways EditMain article Narrow gauge railways in Russia In 1981 there were 33 400 kilometers of narrow gauge Sakhalin Railway located on Sakhalin gauge of 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in Apsheronsk narrow gauge railway located in the Krasnodar Krai gauge of 750 mm 2 ft 5 1 2 in Kudemskaya narrow gauge railway located in the Arkhangelsk Oblast Severodvinsk gauge of 750 mm Alapayevsk narrow gauge railway located in the Sverdlovsk Oblast Alapayevsk gauge of 750 mm Altsevo peat railway located in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast gauge of 750 mm Kerzhenets peat railway located in Nizhny Novgorod Oblast gauge of 750 mm Pishchalskoye peat railway located in Kirov Oblast gauge of 750 mm Gorokhovskoye peat railway located in Kirov Oblast gauge of 750 mm Narrow gauge railway of Decor 1 factory located in the Arzamassky District gauge of 750 mm Narrow gauge railway of KSM 2 factory located in the Tver gauge of 750 mmRailway infrastructure EditCouplers Edit The SA3 coupler 16 Soviet Automatic coupler model 3 used in Russia has several advantages over the Janney coupler used in the United States 17 The SA3 coupler while well designed has had problems with operating due to being made with lower quality steel having a low quality of maintenance repairs rebuilding and coupling cars at speeds higher than allowed by the rules 18 Track gauge Edit The majority of Russia s rail network uses the 1 520 mm Russian gauge which includes all metro systems and the majority of tram networks in the country The Sakhalin Railway on Sakhalin Island used 1 067 mm Cape gauge from its construction under Japan until 2019 when the conversion to 1520 mm completed A section from the Poland Russia border to Kaliningrad uses the 1 435 mm Standard gauge Unlike the Sakhalin Railway which carries freight and passengers the standard gauge line in Kaliningrad carries only freight at this time Kaliningrad s tram network also uses metre gauge tracks at 1 000 mm as does Stavropol krai s Pyatigorsk network Railway universities EditMain article Railway colleges in the Soviet Union There are many railway colleges in Russia which are higher educational institutes that train students for railway careers mainly in engineering Command and control system EditSince 2010 Russian Railways had started an overhaul of its computer systems The overhaul will centralize the management of data into new computing hubs restructure the collection of information on the railway s field operations and integrate new automation software to help the railway strategise how to deploy its assets The geriatric machines that the new mainframes will replace include Soviet built clones of IBM s Cold War era computers called ES EVM the transliterated Russian acronym for unified system of electronic computing machines 19 Foreign activities EditThe RZD operates the Armenian Railway until 2038 During this period at least 570 million euro will be invested 90 going into infrastructure 20 Joint ventures have been formed to build and operate a port in Rasŏn in North Korea and rail links connecting that port to the Russian rail network at the North Korean Russian border Khasan Tumangang 21 Trans Eurasia Logistics is a joint venture with RZD that operates container freight trains between Germany and China via Russia Rail links with adjacent countries EditVoltage of electrification systems not necessarily compatible Same gauge Estonia Latvia Lithuania only from the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave Belarus Ukraine closed Georgia currently only connects with the breakaway Republic of Abkhazia the line beyond to Georgia proper is closed for political reasons Azerbaijan Kazakhstan Mongolia Finland the difference to 1 524 mm 5 ft is so small that the same rolling stock can be used Break of gauge China break of gauge 1 520 mm 4 ft 11 27 32 in to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in North Korea break of gauge 1 520 mm 4 ft 11 27 32 in to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Poland only from the Kaliningrad Oblast exclave break of gauge 1 520 mm 4 ft 11 27 32 in to 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in Note that break of gauge between Poland and Belarus near Brest is in use of Russian Railways mostlySee also Edit nbsp Russia portal nbsp Transport portal nbsp Railways portalTsarskoye Selo Railway Communications in Russia Elektrichka History of rail transport in Russia List of railways in Russia List of named passenger trains of Russia Ministry of Railways of the USSR Moscow Saint Petersburg Railway Russian gauge Railway engineering of Russia Russian Post Russian Railways Sibirjak Trans Siberian Railway Transport in Russia Transportation in Moscow Varshavsky Rail Terminal St Petersburg national railway museum of Russia The Museum of the Moscow Railway Rizhsky Rail Terminal Home of the Moscow Railway Museum Emperor railway station in Pushkin town Rolling stock manufacturers of RussiaReferences Edit Intro adapted from Russell Pittman Blame the Switchman Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years working paper Antitrust Division U S Department of Justice 2011 Blame the Switchman Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years a b Passenger transportation PDF Concise Annual Report 2017 Russian Railways Retrieved 6 October 2018 Lenta RU News RZhD poprosila pravitelstvo zanyatsya spaseniem zheleznyh dorog in Russian RZD asks government to rescue the railway The gauge of history The Economist Table 2 28 PEREVOZKI PASSAZhIROV I PASSAZhIROOBOROT ZhELEZNODOROZhNOGO TRANSPORTA OBShEGO POLZOVANIYa TRANSPORTATION OF PASSENGERS AND PASSENGER TURNOVER OF PUBLIC RAILWAY TRANSPORT Archived 2013 05 25 at the Wayback Machine Osnovnye pokazateli transportnoj deyatelnosti v Rossii 2008 g Copyright c Federalnaya sluzhba gosudarstvennoj statistiki Table 2 25 PEREVOZKI GRUZOV I GRUZOOBOROT ZhELEZNODOROZhNOGO TRANSPORTA OBShEGO POLZOVANIYa TRANSPORTATION OF CARGO AND FREIGHT TURNOVER OF PUBLIC RAILWAY TRANSPORT Archived 2016 03 03 at the Wayback Machine Osnovnye pokazateli transportnoj deyatelnosti v Rossii 2008 g Copyright c Federalnaya sluzhba gosudarstvennoj statistiki Table 2 24 NALIChIE PODVIZhNOGO SOSTAVA ZhELEZNODOROZhNOGO TRANSPORTA OBShEGO POLZOVANIYa PUBLIC RAILWAY ROLLING STOCK AND ITS USE Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Osnovnye pokazateli transportnoj deyatelnosti v Rossii 2008 g Copyright c Federalnaya sluzhba gosudarstvennoj statistiki PROTYaZhENNOST EKSPLUATACIONNYH PUTEJ ZhELEZNODOROZhNOGO TRANSPORTA OBShEGO POLZOVANIYa Lengths of railway lines in Russian Table 2 13 Freight by electric railroad 2008 in Russian Chris Lo 1 May 2013 Russian railways connecting a growing economy railway technology com Retrieved 16 September 2014 Courtney Weaver 17 June 2013 Russian rail freight proves a worthy investment Financial Times Archived from the original on 11 December 2022 Retrieved 16 September 2014 Plaks p 5 in Russian Rezer p 5 in Russian Industrial Railroad Statistics in Russian Rezer pp 25 6 in Russian filippov 1981 pp 18 14 Filippov 1991 pp 152 4 in Russian See also Shadur 1980 Chapt X Udarno tyagovye pribory couplers and draft gears in Russian George R Cockle editor Car and locomotive cyclopedia of American practices 3rd edition Simmons Boardman Pub Corp New York 1974 p S8 1 Section 8 Couplers Note that the SA3 is a Willison type coupler Kostina N A Preduprezhdenie razryvov poezdov Preventing trains from breaking in two ZhT 10 1988 pp 41 2 and another article from ZhT date unknown IEEE Spectrum s special report Winners amp Losers VII IBM overhauls Russian Railways software infrastructure p 123 By Sandria Upson Jan 2010 Full text 1 Eurailpress RZD gewinnt Ausschreibung in Armenien Railway Gazette Rajin port accord Retrieved 2010 10 30 Further reading EditIn English Edit Boublikoff A A A suggestion for railroad reform in book Buehler E C editor Government ownership of railroads Annual debater s help book vol VI New York Noble and Noble 1939 pp 309 318 Original in journal North American Review vol 237 pp 346 Title is misleading It s 90 about Russian railways European Conference of Ministers of Transport Regulatory Reform of Railways in Russia 2004 Regulatory Reform of Railways in Russia Hunter Holland Soviet transport experience Its lessons for other countries Brookings Institution 1968 Omrani Bijan Asia Overland Tales of Travel on the Trans Siberian and Silk Road Odyssey Publications 2010 ISBN 962 217 811 1 Pittman Russell Blame the Switchman Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years working paper Antitrust Division U S Department of Justice 2011 Blame the Switchman Russian Railways Restructuring After Ten Years Railroad Facts Yearbook Association of American Railroads Washington DC annual Transportation in America Statistical Analysis of Transportation in the United States 18th edition with historical compendium 1939 1999 by Rosalyn A Wilson pub by Eno Transportation Foundation Inc Washington DC 2001 See table Domestic Intercity Ton Miles by Mode pp 12 13 UN United Nations Statistical Yearbook The earlier editions were designated by date such as 1985 86 but later editions use the edition number such as 51st After 1985 86 the World railway traffic table was dropped After the 51st edition the long table Railways traffic was dropped resulting in no more UN railway statistics Urba CE The railroad situation a perspective on the present past and future of the U S railroad industry Washington Dept of Transportation Federal Railroad Administration Office of Policy and Program Development Govt Print Off 1978 VanWinke Jenette and Zycher Benjamin Future Soviet Investment in Transportation Energy and Environmental Protection A Rand Note The Rand Corporation Santa Monica CA 1992 Rand Soviet Transport Westwood J N 2002 Soviet Railways to Russian Railways Palgrave Macmillan Ward Christopher J Brezhnev s Folly The Building of BAM and Late Soviet Socialism University of Pittsburgh Press 2009 In Russian Edit Plaks A V amp Pupynin V N Elektricheskie zheleznye dorogi Electric Railroads Moskva Transport 1993 Rezer S M Vzaimodejstvie transportnyh sistem Moskva Nauka 1985 Shadur L A editor Vagony konstrukciya teoriya i raschyot Railroad cars construction theory and calculations Moskva Transport 1980 Fed Federalnaya sluzhba gosudarstvennoj statistiki Federal government statistical service Transport v Rossii Transportation in Russia annual Available online Filippov M M editor Zheleznye Dorogi Obshij Kurs Railroads General Course Moskva Transport 3rd ed 1981 4th ed 1991 with new editor Uzdin M M Shafirkin B I Edinaya Transportnaya Sistema SSSR i vzaimodejstvie razlichnyh vidov transporta Unified Transportation System of the USSR and interaction of various modes of transportation Moskva Vysshaya shkola 1983 Shadur L A editor Vagony Railway cars Moskva Transport 1980 External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rail transport in Russia Russian Railways Official Site in English and Russian Steam on Sakhalin Island 2 Russian Railway in 1935 A site about railways in C I S and Baltics Archived from the original on 4 December 2012 Rail Fan Europe Rail map of former Soviet Union Archived from the original on 4 January 2013 Shows electrification status and also many Industrial railways Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rail transport in Russia amp oldid 1174265471, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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