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China high-speed railway section reportedly collapses

Kevrai

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China high-speed railway section reportedly collapses, reviving safety fears, jolting shares

By Associated Press, Published: March 12

SHANGHAI — Part of a high-speed railway line that had already undergone test runs collapsed in central China following heavy rains, state media reported Monday, jolting railroad shares and reviving worries over safety.

The official Xinhua News Agency and other reports said a 300-meter (984 feet) section of the railway line had collapsed, but mentioned no casualties or other details. It said hundreds of workers were rushing to repair the line between the Yangtze River cities of Wuhan and Yichang.

The reports of the accident Friday near Qianjiang city in Hubei province, the latest since a bullet-train crash last summer that killed 40 people, rattled share markets in Hong Kong and Shanghai, where major railway company stocks dropped on the news.

China Railway Construction Corp. dropped 6.6 percent, China Railway Group Ltd. fell 5.7 percent to HK$2.82 and China Southern Rail lost 4.4 percent. All are traded in Hong Kong.

China has massive resources and considerable prestige invested in its showcase high-speed railways program, and the news appeared to raise sensitivities over the issue. A local government website ran an article denying that any collapse had occurred.

An officer who answered the phone Monday in the information office of the China Railway 12th Bureau Group Co., which is in charge of the project, said he had not heard about the collapse and said no other officials were available for comment. The official refused to give his name or title.

Officials in the Hubei Province and Qianjiang city information offices were also not available for comment. The Railways Ministry did not immediately respond to inquiries by phone.

China has 13 high-speed railways in operation, with 26 under construction and 23 more planned. Much of the system, similar to that in Japan, is built on elevated tracks.

Engineers working on some projects have complained of problems with contractors using inferior concrete or inadequate steel support bars. A report last week by the state-run magazine Time Weekly reported allegations that builders on another section of the same Wuhan-Yichang line may have compromised safety by substituting soil for rocks in the railway bed.

The railway line is due to open in May.

Authorities slowed expansion of the multibillion-dollar bullet train system following the July 23 crash near Wenzhou, in southeastern China. It was triggered by a lightning strike, though a government probe also blamed faulty signal systems and missteps by train operators.

Since the Wenzhou crash, there have been reports of problems with brakes, signaling systems and faulty construction. In one case the Railways Ministry ordered almost all of a $260 million railway line in northeastern China redone after finding contractors had farmed the work out to unqualified construction companies that filled railway bridges’ foundations with rocks and sand instead of concrete.

A report by World Bank experts issued last week lauded China’s success in rapidly expanding the system, which is due to grow to 10,000 miles (16,000 kilometers) of track by 2020 from 3,700 miles (6,000 kilometers) as of last year.

That report said it was unclear whether the speed of the buildup had compromised safety, but noted that the Wenzhou accident showed there was “room for improvement.”

In an interview with Xinhua, Huang Qiang, chief researcher with the China Academy of Railway Sciences, said Beijing is continuing a safety overhaul of high-speed railways that includes development and improvement of signaling equipment, train maintenance and protection against lightning and earthquakes.

“China’s high-speed railway development has been aggressive in previous years, in which some important links were missed,” Xinhua quoted Huang as saying.

Still, the government says it intends to push ahead with the program.

China is due to spend 400 billion yuan ($630 billion) this year on railway infrastructure, down from 469 billion yuan in 2011 and over 700 billion yuan in 2010.

China high-speed railway section reportedly collapses, reviving safety fears, jolting shares - The Washington Post
 
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There is another thread on the same topic. Can Mod please merge the 2?:mod:

Better news is nobody is hurt.
 
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Here is another list of the worst rail accidents around the world from 2002 to 2010; during this period China had one in 2008, RIP to all!:

-2002-

- Feb 20 - EGYPT: 361 die when a train catches fire 43 miles south of Cairo.
- May 25 - MOZAMBIQUE: More than 190 die when a train derails around 25 miles to the south-west of Maputo.
- June 24 - TANZANIA: 288 die near the administrative capital Dodoma when a train's engine fails as it is climbing a steep hill, sending all 22 carriages careering back down the track into a goods train.
- Sept 9 - INDIA: 119 die when a train derails and plunges into a river in the eastern state of Bihar.

-2003-

- Feb 1 - ZIMBABWE: More than 50 die when a passenger train collides with a goods train in the south-west of the country.
- June 22 - INDIA: 51 die when a train derails due to bad weather in the western state of Maharashtra.

-2004-

- Feb 18 - IRAN: 328 die when a train carrying chemicals explodes near to Neishabour in the north east of the country.
- April 22 - NORTH KOREA: The collision of two cargo trains carrying fuel at Ryongchon, 12 miles south of the North Korean border with China, kills more than 150 people.

-2005-

- Feb 3 - INDIA: 53 are killed in the western state of Maharashtra when a train collides with a tractor pulling a trailer that is crammed with people returning from a wedding.
- April 25 - JAPAN: 107 people are killed after the derailment of a train which crashes into a residential building near to the western city of Osaka.
- July 13 - PAKISTAN: 150 are killed and a thousand injured in an accident involving three passenger trains near to Ghotki, 248 miles to the north-east of Karachi.

-2006-

- Aug 21 - EGYPT: At least 58 are killed in the collision of two trains travelling on the same rail track north of Cairo.
- Oct 29 - INDIA: 110 die when a train derails 43 miles from Hyderabad, the capital of the state of Andhra Pradesh.

-2008-

- April 28 - CHINA: At least 70 die in the collision of two trains in the east of the country.

-2010-

- June 22 - CONGO: At least 60 people die and hundreds are injured about 38 miles from Pointe Noire in southern Congo-Brazzaville after carriages derailed when the train took a bend at speed.

The world's worst rail accidents from 2002 to 2010 - Telegraph

-2011-

-On 23 July 2011, two high-speed trains travelling on the Yongtaiwen railway line collided on a viaduct in the suburbs of Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, China. The two trains derailed each other, and four cars fell off the viaduct. 40 people were killed, at least 192 were injured, 12 of which were severe injuries.

NOTE: not a complete listing in 2011
 
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Why are we talking about train accidents. This wasn't one, more like a structural failure.
 
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Chinese Infrastructure is a sham when it comes to safety. IMO, japanese and Europeans follow better safety norms.
 
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Why are we talking about train accidents. This wasn't one, more like a structural failure.

They're related! We are lucky this time that the collapse of the foundation didn't lead to serious problems.
 
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Here is another list of the worst rail accidents around the world from 2002 to 2010; during this period China had one in 2008, RIP to all!:

-2002-

- Feb 20 - EGYPT: 361 die when a train catches fire 43 miles south of Cairo.
- May 25 - MOZAMBIQUE: More than 190 die when a train derails around 25 miles to the south-west of Maputo.
- June 24 - TANZANIA: 288 die near the administrative capital Dodoma when a train's engine fails as it is climbing a steep hill, sending all 22 carriages careering back down the track into a goods train.
- Sept 9 - INDIA: 119 die when a train derails and plunges into a river in the eastern state of Bihar.

-2003-

- Feb 1 - ZIMBABWE: More than 50 die when a passenger train collides with a goods train in the south-west of the country.
- June 22 - INDIA: 51 die when a train derails due to bad weather in the western state of Maharashtra.

-2004-

- Feb 18 - IRAN: 328 die when a train carrying chemicals explodes near to Neishabour in the north east of the country.
- April 22 - NORTH KOREA: The collision of two cargo trains carrying fuel at Ryongchon, 12 miles south of the North Korean border with China, kills more than 150 people.

-2005-

- Feb 3 - INDIA: 53 are killed in the western state of Maharashtra when a train collides with a tractor pulling a trailer that is crammed with people returning from a wedding.
- April 25 - JAPAN: 107 people are killed after the derailment of a train which crashes into a residential building near to the western city of Osaka.
- July 13 - PAKISTAN: 150 are killed and a thousand injured in an accident involving three passenger trains near to Ghotki, 248 miles to the north-east of Karachi.

-2006-

- Aug 21 - EGYPT: At least 58 are killed in the collision of two trains travelling on the same rail track north of Cairo.
- Oct 29 - INDIA: 110 die when a train derails 43 miles from Hyderabad, the capital of the state of Andhra Pradesh.

-2008-

- April 28 - CHINA: At least 70 die in the collision of two trains in the east of the country.

-2010-

- June 22 - CONGO: At least 60 people die and hundreds are injured about 38 miles from Pointe Noire in southern Congo-Brazzaville after carriages derailed when the train took a bend at speed.

The world's worst rail accidents from 2002 to 2010 - Telegraph

-2011-

-On 23 July 2011, two high-speed trains travelling on the Yongtaiwen railway line collided on a viaduct in the suburbs of Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, China. The two trains derailed each other, and four cars fell off the viaduct. 40 people were killed, at least 192 were injured, 12 of which were severe injuries.

NOTE: not a complete listing in 2011

I am surprised that BD is not in that list !! :woot:
 
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I don't think india is much better!

Its just one of those people that feel they need to take advantage of any moment to show china in low light. Imo, just ignore him.

@ topic,

Engineering is not always perfect in real world. Things happen, but what matters the most is the minimal loss of life and the learning/ improvement process that follows after an incident.
 
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