Siemens Transportation Systems

A First in Europe: New European Train Control System (ETCS) Level 2, Certified for Passenger Service

07 December 2005 16:21


As of December 5, the new European Train Control System (ETCS) is being used for revenue passenger services in Germany. It is the first country to use level 2 of ETCS for controlling trains in regularly scheduled service. This is a milestone in the development of cross-border rail traffic in Europe. ETCS technology is being employed on the stretch of line between Jüterbog and Halle / Leipzig. Siemens and Alcatel, as the members of a consortium, worked with Deutsche Bahn to implement the German ETCS pilot project.

The consortium spent six years developing ETCS technology before series trials began in July 2003, when a train traveling at 200km/h between Jüterbog and Bitterfeld was controlled by ETCS level 2 for the first time in Europe. After the two-year trial period, the Jüterbog to Halle / Leipzig line was the first route in Europe to be approved for commercial passenger services with ETCS level 2.

Andreas Busemann, head of the Rail Automation Division at Siemens Transportation Systems, stressed that "this demonstration of the system's performance in actual train operations is a milestone on the way to the interoperability of all European railways. What is important now is to create the general political framework which will ensure that this technological lead is turned into sustained economic success for German industry."

"This fact demonstrates that ETCS performs safely and reliably and is also characterised by a high degree of availability," said Hans Leibbrand, head of Alcatel's Transport Automation Systems division in Germany, expressing his pleasure at the success that has been achieved. "With our technology, we can provide the basis for cross-border rail traffic everywhere in Europe and underline Germany's lead in the area of train control and protection systems."

European railways and the railway industry agree that it makes economic sense to equip entire corridors with ETCS and that this is the only way to secure the desired chronological and economic advantages over long distances. In Germany, which is a major transportation turntable for Europe, 4,500km of the trans-European corridors passing through the Federal Republic are to be equipped with ETCS by 2020. At the present time, trials with ETCS are being carried out on railway routes throughout Europe over a total distance of around 6,000km. When these routes are joined together to create even larger distances, Germany will acquire special responsibility for rail transportation due to its central position in Europe.


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Siemens Transportation Systems - Signalling and Control Systems


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