Indian Railways Approves Major Capacity And Safety Projects
Barbenda–Damrughutu doubling and Damrughutu–Bokaro Steel City third and fourth lines in Jharkhand target a corridor that is operating at 108 per cent utilisation and faces train detention of 90–150 minutes. The project cost is Rs 8.1532 bn and it handles 78 trains daily with a freight throughput of 35.22 mn t per annum. The works aim to prevent utilisation rising towards 132 per cent by 2028–29 and to ease logistics for coal, cement, petroleum and steel hubs.
Electronic Interlocking has been approved for 34 stations on Northern Railway at a cost of Rs 4.2141 bn, with Rs 2.9224 bn for 21 stations in the Delhi Division and Rs 1.2917 bn for 13 stations in the Ambala Division. The signalling upgrades will improve route setting, support higher frequencies on high density routes and complement Kavach and other safety technologies. The Rajpura bypass linking the New Shambhu DFC station to Kauli was cleared at Rs 4.1196 bn to allow freight to bypass the Rajpura yard and streamline Ambala–Jalandhar corridor movements.
In Kerala the Alappuzha–Ambalapuzha doubling at Rs 3.2416 bn will remove the final single-line constraint, permit nine additional passenger trains and add two point eight eight mn t per annum of freight capacity with annual earnings of Rs 32.3 mn. The Palakkad bypass at Rs 1.6357 bn will cut passenger detention by around 40–44 minutes and cut freight detention by 120 minutes per train. The Irugur–Podanur doubling at Rs 2.7742 bn will allow 15 additional passenger trains, add three point one two mn t per annum of freight capacity and increase annual net earnings by Rs 117.7 mn.