Around
the year 1856, railway tracks were laid for the first time, to
connect my home town Pune, which was a garrison town then, to the
British stronghold on west coast of India and now commercial capital
of India; Mumbai. This railway line crossed the 'Sahyadri' or the
western ghat mountain range between two stations; 'Khandala' on the
hill top and 'Karjat' at the foot, almost at sea level.
In the
early days, though there were number of smaller tunnels, a tunnel
through a huge mountain obstacle, that stood in the way, was not
thought feasible. Railway engineers had then devised an ingenious
arrangement, known as reversing station. This station was located on
the tracks after a bridge with a dead end. The train would cross this
bridge and would stop at the station. Then it would just reverse it's
direction of travel and join a separate track that bypassed the huge
mountain. Sometime later, railways managed to build a long tunnel
through this mountain and then reversing bridge was no longer
required. However, this bridge can still be seen even now, when one
travels by train from Pune to Mumbai and is an amazing sight.
This
entire mountain section, through which the train passes, is endowed
with stunning natural beauty, more so during monsoon months. Dense
tropical forests, lush green meadows and mountain peaks, make it a
natural adventure spot for youth. I have been to this area many a
times during monsoons, to enjoy the nature. While roaming around the
area, I would often see railway tracks, that were not part of the
main Pune -Mumbai line, but were sort of offshoots from it. These
tracks usually disappeared deep into jungles. Once on a picnic with
some of my friends, we decided to investigate, where these train
tracks actually go? We walked along the tracks, which were
surprisingly not rusted but actually well maintained, for more than a
mile in the deep jungles. Later we found out that the track started
climbing a steep slope on a mountain side and further up, the track
just stopped. There were buffers provided at the end to stop a train
moving on the track. These buffers were surprisingly well entrenched
and supported in thick platforms built out of stone. We could not
understand why and for what purpose these tracks were laid and gave
up.
Much
later, I realized that these tracks were actually built to stop a
runaway train, with failed brakes and in railway terminology are
called catch sidings. All trains on this mountain section, follow a
strict regime, under which they come to a dead stop at two designated
places on this steep sloping terrain. The trains are required to
stand still there for couple of minutes to test whether their brakes
are functioning properly or not. If a train does not come to a full
stop, the points and signal men simply would let it roll on to the
catch siding track going up on a steep incline, where the train would
come to stop on its own because of the steep climb. This is no doubt
a very simple yet effective method of ensuring safety during descent
or ascent in the steep mountain terrain. This stop and proceed
regime, is followed even today for each and every train crossing this
mountain section.
I am
very much reminded of these runaway train catch sidings near
'Khandala' town today, after having read about the havoc caused by a
runaway train in Quebec region of Canada and the devastation it has
caused to a town. This sad incident happened last weekend, near the
scenic lakeside town of Lac-Megantic, nestled in a dark pine and
birch forest in Quebec, on a short length of sloping track, where the
freight trains, hauling crude oil and other raw materials across
North America, regularly take an overnight stop.
Before
retiring for the night, the train operators normally set here, the
hand brakes and leave one locomotive running to power the air brakes
that help hold the train in place on the gently sloping track ahead.
The next morning, the operator or a relief engineer again starts up
the train and continues on his way.
On 6th
July 2013, this system failed, as the locomotive that was parked
running for the night, caught fire. According to the chairman of the
railway company operating the railway line, The Montreal, Maine &
Atlantic Railway (MMA), one of the an experienced Canadian engineer
of the company had parked the train in the small town of Nantes at a
siding, on a short length of track, where trains make overnight
stops. The siding is about 7 miles from town of Lac-Megantic. He had
secured the train at 11:25 p.m. setting the air brakes and hand
brakes, on all five locomotives at the front of the train, as well as
brakes on a number of cars, in line with company policy. Four of the
train’s engines were switched off, but the front locomotive was
left on to power the air brakes. The engineer, had then retired to a
hotel in Lac-Megantic.
Within
minutes, things started going wrong. Nantes fire department got a
call about a blaze on one of the locomotives at 11:30 PM, fire likely
caused by a broken fuel or oil line. The Firefighters reached the
scene within seven minutes and found a good sized fire, but
contained in the motor of the train. They put off the fire by 12.12
PM and as per their own protocols, also switched off the locomotive.
Without
any effective braking system, the train started moving gently on the
sloping track, gathering speed. A person, who has his wooden cabin
near the track, heard a train moving and saw that it had no lights
and thought it was an electrical problem on board. The train however
picked up speed quickly and crossed the speed limit of 10 miles per
hour (16 km per hour) as it reached a curve in the track in the very
center of Lac-Megantic town around 1:15 AM and jumped the tracks.
The Locomotives separated from the buffer car – a heavy railcar
loaded with stones or rocks or sand – and the tanker cars, which
were laden with a free-flowing mineral oil. There were five or six
explosions. The crude caught on fire, spread through the storm drains
and spilled into the deep blue lake. As crude oil from 72 rail cars
rolled downhill into the scenic lakeside town of Lac-Megantic, there
was wide spread fire and devastation that killed at least 13 people
and 37 are still missing.
This
disaster really brings out the importance of a catch siding for a
train standing on a slope, as is provided in the mountain section of
railway tracks near my home town. Only if they had one such catch
siding near Lac-Megantic town, a major disaster could have been
averted.
11
July 2013
It looks like a complete systems failure as well.
ReplyDeleteIf there was a fire on the train, the fire deparment should have known where these drivers rest and alerted them as soon as they heard of the incidence.
It is a very good investigative article. However, in Indian Railways there is a principle of keeping back up arrangement for all failure possibilities. Was there no back up arrangement in case of failure of the locomotive providing the braking power for the train?
ReplyDelete