Rail freight in Germany was severely disrupted after an overhead line failure in the evening hours of 31 March. Traffic was said to have started again in the late afternoon of 1 April. Operations were down for less than a day, but that was enough to cause major financial losses.
The overhead line failure took place on a particularly sensitive spot on the German railway network, namely on the Hamburg-Hannover railway. This is currently the main detour route for the closed Hamburg-Berlin railway.
Ahead of the Hamburg-Berlin closure, infrastructure manager DB InfraGO was warned multiple times that a single disruption on the detour route could be dangerous. Unfortunately, that’s exactly what happened.
On top of the overhead line failure, there were more infrastructure failures in Peine, and overhead line damage on the line between Hannover and Lehrte. “All three lines are essential for smooth rail freight operations while the Hamburg-Berlin corridor renovation continues”, explains the German rail freight association Die Güterbahnen. Rail freight is said to be hit particularly hard as widespread and unplanned shutdowns take place on sidings.
Six-figure losses
“The Port of Hamburg is suffering particularly badly from the shutdown”, commented the association’s Managing Director Peter Westenberger. “But so are the railway companies. One of our members pointed out that last night alone will cause six-figure losses.”
“Customers will feel the effects for days, perhaps weeks. […] The lines were not adequately upgraded beforehand. Consequently, rail freight traffic is currently very vulnerable. Now it is crucial to mitigate the damage and get operations back on track as quickly as possible”, Westenberger said in the afternoon of 1 April.