http://scroll.in/article/822041/indias-rail-safety-rests-on-the-shoulders-of-200000-trackmen-with-15-kilos-of-gear-on-their-backs

RAIL TRAIL

India's rail safety rests on the shoulders of 200,000 trackmen with 15
kilos of gear on their backs

As more than 130 people die in a train accident in Kanpur, discussion
on modern safety systems has been revived.

Yesterday · 10:30 am
Updated Yesterday · 11:52 am
Scroll Staff

More than 130 people have died in one of the worst railway accidents
India has seen in years, after the Patna-Indore Express derailed in
Kanpur Dehat district on Sunday. The incident saw 14 coaches coming
off the tracks, leading to horrific scenes of mangled bogies and
serious injuries, in addition to the death toll which authorities are
concerned may still go up.

Since efforts are still on to rescue people at the site, officials
have not yet spoken of the cause of the incident. One official said
that another train passed through the route safely just nine minutes
before the accident. Yet most seem to have concluded that the
derailment was likely the result of a rail fracture – a crack in the
tracks.

“A high-level probe has already been ordered and we will take strict
action,” said Minister of State for Railways Manoj Sinha, who visited
the spot on Sunday. “The engineers and experts will probe the cause of
the accident, but it appears there was a rail fracture.”

Rail fractures
Rail fractures occur when a small crack turns into a larger one,
usually because of the pressure of heavy bogies traveling over it.
Indian Railways, which maintains 115,000 km of track around the
country, is particularly prone to it in the season when there is a
significant difference between the maximum and minimum temperatures in
the day, since those cause the tracks to expand and contract. Poor
maintenance and fitting could also be the cause of a small crack that
over time could turn into a separation of rails. The result is a break
in the tracks, which causes the bogey to go off the rails, affecting
all the coaches behind it as well.

The Times of India reported that 50% of train accidents in the last
three years have been due to derailments, of which 29% were caused by
track defects. Accidents due to derailment have been up by 67% this
fiscal year, up to November 15. Those numbers will be even worse once
the Kanpur incident has been accounted for, especially since it came
just days after another train derailed in Jodhpur.

The accident has also turned the spotlight back on passenger safety,
with some claiming that the recent push to increase capacity and
redesign business models for the railways has shifted focus away from
core safety issues. The Hindustan Times quoted an unnamed senior
ministry source saying “somewhere along the line, routine safety
drills have taken a backseat and the 1 lakh-odd vacancies in the
safety category have remained”. The report also quoted Sanjay Pandhi
of the Indian Railways Loco Running Men Organisation saying that the
business aim of the railways, running more and heavier trains, has led
to a deterioration in the rail tracks.

Track monitors
Some of the focus might turn back to the physical way that Indian
Railways actually maintains its massive track length. One of the
world’s biggest employers, Indian Railways has an entire department of
trackmen – formerly known as gangmen – whose entire job revolves
around maintaining tracks. These 200,000 trackmen set out every
morning carrying 15 kilos of equipment and walk along a 5 kilometre
stretch of rail to check it for defects.

Play
The work is hard, as well as dangerous. Trackmen spend most of their
day on tracks that still have trains plying on them, which leads to an
average of more than 300 deaths every year. Added to the danger is the
pressure of maintaining the tracks themselves, since mistakes by
trackmen could leave trains vulnerable to incidents like the tragic
derailment in Kanpur.

Play
For years, the authorities have promised to develop safety technology
that will better alert trackmen when trains are approaching and giving
them lighter toolkits.

In addition to the trackmen, Indian Railways uses ultra-sonic flaw
detection machines, but these have to be taken out manually and are
thus likely to only travel over high-density routes once every two
months. The authorities are working with the Indian Institute of
Technology-Madras to develop automated detection systems, but for the
most part current monitoring is heavily dependent on the trackmen
alerting engineers about potential dangers.

Earlier this year, Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu launched the Track
Monitoring System, software meant to store information regarding
temperature and track-maintenance activity across the railways.
However, The Pioneer reported that the new system is not available to
those in the safety wing. “As a result, the monitoring mechanism
becomes a closely guarded secret defeating the very purpose of the
launching of the software application,” an unnamed railway official
told the paper.


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