The Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor, which has just
been completed, and the Western Dedicated Freight Corridor, which is nearing
completion, are potential gamechangers for the country’s economy.
The corridors are
expected to enable the Indian Railways to speed up the movement of
long-distance goods traffic and decongest the railway tracks for passenger
movement.
The EDFC, which stretches across 1,337 km from
Ludhiana in Punjab to Sonnagar in Bihar while covering the coal belt of
Jharkhand and West Bengal, has been fully completed and was opened to
commercial traffic on Nov 1.
As much as 1176 km of the 1506 km WDFC linking
Jawaharlal Nehru Port in Navi Mumbai to Dadri on the outskirts of Delhi has
also been constructed and the remaining portion is expected to be completed
soon.
Dedicated freight
corridors offer an average speed of 50-60 kmph, which is almost thrice that of
regular railway tracks on which goods trains have to stop or slow down to let
passenger trains pass.
The DFCs will
enable India to cut its high logistics costs from some 13-15 per cent of the
GDP to the target of 8 per cent which is more in
line with global standards. In addition, each kilometre-long freight train on
the EDFC will replace some 72 trucks on average. This will ease congestion on
India’s overcrowded roads and highways, which carry an overwhelming 60 per cent
of the country’s freight.
With freight trains touching maximum speeds of up to
100 km/h on this corridor, the rapid supply of coal to power plants has led to a drastic cut in transportation time and
reduced logistics costs.
The quick transportation leads to an enhanced
efficiency in the power sector which had to often see large blackouts due to
coal stocks not reaching in time. The movement of other essential goods,
including iron and steel, has also become quicker. The commissioning of this
segment has not only eased the pressure on the Delhi-Howrah main line but has
also facilitated the swift and smooth operation of trains on the freight
corridor. This has enabled the
introduction of additional passenger train services on the Delhi-Howrah main
line.