Logo

Logo

Railways to try hydrogen-powered trains on heritage routes

As a pilot project, the Railways is manufacturing a hydrogen-fueled train at its Golden Rock Workshop in Tamil Nadu. It will be tested on the Sonipat-Jind section of Haryana.

Railways to try hydrogen-powered trains on heritage routes

[Photo:istock]

Wherever electrification is difficult or too expensive in the world, efforts are made to replace diesel-powered railway locomotives with hydrogen as it provides an emission-free quieter alternative that can be economically feasible.

Taking a cue from this, Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnav, on Tuesday, said the Indian Railways will run hydrogen trains on its narrow gauge heritage routes by December 2023.

Advertisement

These trains will be introduced on the lines of trains running in China and Germany.

Advertisement

Once the hydrogen-powered trains introduced, the heritage routes will go completely eco-friendly.

Germany’s Coradia iLint is the world’s first passenger train powered by a hydrogen fuel cell, which produces electrical power for traction. This zero-emission train emits a low level of noise, with the only exhaust being steam and condensed water. The train can run 1000 km at a speed of 140 km per hour. This train was being tested in Germany since 2018.

China has also recently introduced Asia’s first hydrogen-powered train for urban railways. As per reports, it gets a range of 600 km on a single tank, with a top speed of 160 kmph.

The heritage routes of the Indian Railways, which run mainly on diesel – Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, Nilgiri Mountain Railway, Kalka Shimla Railway, Matheran Hill Railway, Kangra Valley, Bilmora Waghai and Marwar-Deogarh Madaria – all run on narrow gauge.

As a pilot project, the Railways is manufacturing a hydrogen-fueled train at its Golden Rock Workshop in Tamil Nadu. It will be tested on the Sonipat-Jind section of Haryana.

Advertisement