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How safe is train travel?

  • March 07, 2023
  • Sport

According to the latest figures available, there were 1,331 significant accidents, 687 fatalities and 469 serious injuries were reported in EU countries in 2020, which are “the lowest values ever recorded”. 

Since 1980, there has been an overall “downward trend” in major accidents and fatalities across EU railways. In 2020 and 2021, there were no accidents resulting in five or more fatalities although there were two such accidents in 2019. The number of fatal train collisions and derailments has “decreased continuously” since 1990, although 2020 saw a peak of eight major train collisions or derailments.

What about in the US?

According to the Association of American Railroads (AAR), the accident rate is down 28% since 2000 with the last decade being the “safest ever”.

Data from the Federal Railroad Administration revealed that accidents on mainline railways are at “an all-time low” and down 49% since 2000. And for all railroads, the accident rate has declined 44% since 2000. 

Incidents of derailment are down 31% since 2000, however they were up by 5% year on year. According to the AAR, the hazardous materials (hazmat) accident rate is down 78% since 2000, which represents “the lowest ever based on preliminary Bureau of Explosives data”.

However, USA Today analysis showed that in the case of Norfolk Southern, the company involved in the two recent Ohio derailments, “the rate of accidents has been ticking up” over the past decade. And so have its numbers on carriages carrying hazmat materials that have been damaged or derailed, “with 14 damaged or derailed in 2012, a peak of 117 in 2020 and 85 in 2021”, said the news site.

And how safe is it in the UK?

In the UK, there have been no major accidents that have resulted in passenger or workforce fatalities since August 2020, when three people were killed in a derailment at Carmont, in Scotland. The accident followed “13 years with no passenger or workforce fatalities in accidents of that type in Britain”, according to data from the Office of Rail and Road

According to the latest data, there were 11 passenger or public facilities on the UK’s rail network in the year to March 2022, an increase from six in the previous year while the country was in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

Six fatalities occurred in mainline stations, two occurred on the London Underground and three fatalities occurred after collisions between members of the public and trams.

There were 9,065 workforce and non-workforce injuries in the latest year, an increase of 64.1% compared with the previous lockdown-affected year. The figure is still the lowest of any pre-pandemic year going back to at least 2002-03.

Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/transport/959962/how-safe-is-train-travel

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