The Jammu–Baramulla line[2] is a
railway track being laid to connect the
Kashmir Valley in the Indian union territory of
Jammu and Kashmir with
Jammu railway station and thence to the rest of the country.[3] The 338 km railway track will start from
Jammu and end at
Baramulla.[4] It comes under the jurisdiction of the
Firozpur railway division of
Indian Railways'
Northern zone. Part of this railway route from
Udhampur to Baramulla is known as Udhampur-Srinagar-Baramula Rail Link (USBRL). The 359 m (1,178 ft) tall
Chenab Bridge lies on this line, which is the tallest railway bridge in the world.[5] The total project cost in 2022 was INR28,000 crore (~US$3.5 billion).[6]
Construction of the route faced natural challenges including major earthquake zones, extreme temperatures and inhospitable terrain.[7] This Rail project from Jammu to Baramula was being initiated by Prime Minister Shri PV Narsimha Rao in 1996 later in 2002 Prime Minister Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee announced it National Project. Although scheduled completion date for the project was 15 August 2007, the revised timeline for the completion of remaining Katra–Banihal section of the project is December 2024.
The extension of railway line from Baramulla to Kupwara has also been approved, and revised Detailed Project Report (DPR) for it was submitted in July 2020 by the Railway Board.
Timeline
1994: While the Jammu-Udhampur line remains unfinished after many extensions of time and money, the railway minister announces a rail line to
Baramulla, well beyond even
Srinagar. It is learned that the proposed line will begin from
Qazigund and run to
Srinagar and then onwards to Baramulla. This means that there will be two disconnected stretches of track within the state, and that the proposed new line, which will service only the
Kashmir valley, will not connect to the national network. The reason for this is that laying a railway line from Udhampur to Qazigund (a distance of around 120 km) through the mountains seems unattainable, in view of the non-progress of the Jammu-Udhampur stretch.
2002: Eight years after the announcement, little progress has been achieved since 1994 on the proposed "Valley" line (later known as "Leg 3"), mainly due to militancy and Pakistan-sponsored terrorism. The
Vajpayee government declares the railway line a national project, to be funded entirely by the central government. It also states that an unbroken rail link is imperative, and that they will spend whatever money is required and provide all required environmental or other clearances to establish a rail link from Udhampur through
Katra to Qazigund, and then onwards through Srinagar to Baramulla. The estimated cost is now ₹6,000 crore (equivalent to ₹230 billion or US$2.7 billion in 2023).
2004: The 53 km long Jammu–Udhampur section finally opens, 21 years and ₹515 crore (equivalent to ₹18 billion or US$218.6 million in 2023) after its beginning, the line's Leg 0.[8][9] The line, which cuts through the
Shivalik Hills, has 20 major tunnels and 158 bridges. Its longest tunnel is 2.5 km in length and its highest bridge is 77 m (253 ft) (India's highest railway bridge).
2008 (Sept): The
Ministry of Railways cancels the project on the existing alignment between
Katra and
Qazigund due to suspected geological instability, ordering
Konkan Railway (which had been tasked with the project) to stop all work on the section (including the
Chenab Bridge) and terminate all contracts issued for work on the section before major route changes.[10][11] The Railway Board appoints a committee to examine the feasibility of the project's Leg 2 and rework the Pir Panjal Range route,[12] proposing a fresh survey for a shorter line.[13]
2008 (Oct): The 66 km section between
Anantnag and Manzhama (Mazhom near
Pattan, outside Srinagar) opens on 11 October 2008, with twice-daily service in both directions. Complications continue to affect the project for connection with the plain.[14][15]
2009 (Feb): On 14 February 2009, Leg 3 service is extended beyond Mazhom/
Pattan to Baramulla.[16][17] An extension of the track from Baramulla northward to
Kupwara had been proposed, and its survey was completed in 2009,[18] but the proposal is kept in abeyance for the time being.[19]
2009 (June): In June 2009, work on the section between
Katra and Qazigund is resumed after the committee approves the existing
alignment with only minor changes.[20] Additional
geotechnical tests of rock strata and changes to other portions of the alignment would be reviewed.[21]
2009 (Oct): On 29 October the same year (2009), the 18 km-long section from Anantnag to Qazigund is inaugurated by the prime minister, marking the completion of Leg 3.[22] This means that the entire "Valley" portion of the line, from Qazigund to Baramulla, as proposed in 1994, is now operational, but it remains disconnected from the national railway network.
2010: In December, Indian Railways completes a crucial tunnel in Sangaldam on the route between Katra and
Banihal (on the Katra-Banihal-Qazigund section).[23]
2011–12: Boring of the 11.215 km (7-mile) long
Pir Panjal Railway Tunnel, known informally as the Banihal–Qazigund tunnel, is completed in October 2011. This was a crucial and extremely challenging project and its completion is hailed as an achievement. Tracks are laid during the following year, and a trial run begins on 28 December 2012.[24] This means the line northward from Banihal (to Qazigund and on to Baramulla) is ready, but not the southward stretch towards the rest of India. Eight years after the contract to design and build the world's tallest rail bridge was awarded to
Afcons Infrastructure Limited, excavation of the foundations of the 1,315-metre-long (4,314 ft) bridge across the
Chenab River begins.[25] The construction of all tunnels between Udhampur and Katra, including the T1 Tunnel which had seepage problem, was completed.[26]
2013: The
Pir Panjal Railway Tunnel and
Banihal station are opened. Trains can now run northward from Banihal on Jammu side through the tunnel to Qazigund on the Kashmir side and there onwards up to Baramulla. However, the southward connection to the rest of India is still incomplete. On 9 December 2013, a trial train reaches Katra from the Udhampur side, marking an engineering achievement on the southern side.
2014: On 11 June, a (second?) trial train from Delhi arrives in anticipation of the opening of the Udhampur–Katra line, which will connect Katra to the rest of the country.[27] On 4 July, the Udhampur-Katra line is opened and the
Katra railway station is inaugurated. Commercial railway services now exist from the rest of India up to
Katra, and also from
Banihal all the way north to
Baramulla, but the stretch from Katra to Banihal, an extremely challenging stretch, as described below, remains unfinished.
2018: On 8 November 2018, the Central Government approves extension of railway line northward from Baramulla to
Kupwara.[28] It may be recollected that the project had been proposed in the mid-2000s and a survey had been carried out in 2009.
2019: Status as of July 2019 is as follows: All portions of the track are ready except for the link between Katra and Banihal. This stretch of track is only 111 km long, but as much as 97.34 km of this is made up of tunnels. There will also be 27 major bridges (mostly connecting one tunnel to another tunnel) and 10 minor bridges along this length. Among these bridges will be one built across the deep gorge of the
Chenab river near the Salal hydro-electric dam. This bridge of steel arches will be 1315 metres long and will stand at a height of 359 metres from the ground, which is 35 metres more than the height of the Eiffel tower. The project, which also encompasses 203 km of access roads, is expected to be ready by 2021.[29]
April 2021: The main Arch of the Chenab Bridge (near Salal dam) is completed and closed on 5 April 2021.[30] Now construction of structures like tracks, side railings, girders and access amenities on top of the arch bridge will begin.
Mar 2022: The piers on the top of the main Arch are ready. Launching the girders has started.[31]
Sep 2023: A trial run was conducted and announcement that 95% of the work was completed.[32]
Dec 2023: Final Location Survey of five lines has been sanctioned in Jammu and Kashmir. The lines include doubling of Baramulla-Banihal section (135.5 kilometers), Baramulla-Uri (50 kilometers), Sopore-Kupwara (33.7 kilometers), Awantipora-Shopian (27.6 kilometers) and Anantnag-Bijbehara-Pahalgam (77.5 kilometers).[33]
Feb 2024: A 125kmph high speed trial was conducted successfully between Banihal and Sangaldan (48.1 km) on Feb 16th as part of Commissioner for Railway Safety (CRS) Inspection.[34] On 20th Feb, Prime Minister Narendra Modi inaugurated the first electric MEMU train between Baramulla and Sangaldan, extending service from Banihal through Khari and Sumber before terminating at Sangaldan.[35] This Inauguration delivers three new milestones of USBRL project.
Fully electrified tracks between Udhampur and Sangaldan
First electric train in operation in Kashmir Valley
Longest transport tunnel in India - T50 (12.77 km) - in operation between Khari and Sumber railway stations.[36]
However, the entire project of connecting Kashmir to Rest of India by rail which was slated to be commissioned in February this year, was further delayed to the last quarter of the year due to infrastructural snags. The entire length of 272 km (169 mi) connecting Udhampur with Srinagar and Baramulla was earlier planned to be inaugurated prior to the Loka Sabha elections in March with a Vande Bharat express service between Udhampur and Baramulla.
Progress
The railway line is divided into four sections:[7]
Leg 0, running 53 km from Jammu to
Udhampur and completed in April 2005.[8]
Leg 1, running 25 km from Udhampur to
Katra. The section was completed on 4 July 2014.
Leg 2, running 111 km from Katra to
Banihal section has total tunnels 35 ie 27 main and 8 escape. This under construction section is expected to be completed by December 2024.
Leg 3 running 135 km from
Banihal to
Baramulla. The section was completed on 26 June 2013.[37]
Leg 0
Leg 0 has been operational since 2005. It was built over 21 years, between 1983 and 2004-05.
Leg 1
Leg 1 has been operational since July 2014. The leg had missed opening dates in the past, including December 2005, December 2006[38] and May 2009.[39] Work on the section, suspended for two years due to a partial tunnel collapse, resumed in September 2009.[40] Although the section was planned to open by 2 February 2014, passenger service was delayed due to
Commission of Railway Safety concerns about one bridge and tunnel. The route includes seven tunnels and 30 bridges.[41] The section was opened on 4 July 2014.
Leg 2
Leg 2, running 111 km from Katra to
Banihal is under construction, and missed the deadline in December 2023. Construction on the leg has been beset by technical difficulties with alignment and disputes with contractors,[21] and was originally expected to be finished in 2017–18.[42][43][44][45] This is the line's most difficult section of the rail line, with 62 bridges and a number of tunnels totalling 10 km out of total 129 km. It requires 262 km of access roads connecting 147,000 people in 73 villages; 160 km, connecting 29 villages, is completed.[46] In July 2008, work on part of the Katra-Banihal section was suspended for a possible realignment.[47] The alternative alignment, proposed by the railway, reduced the track length from 126 km to 67 km. A committee appointed by the Railway Board recommended abandoning 93 km of the previously-approved alignment.[48] On 12 November 2014, the
Delhi High Court directed the central government to appoint a committee to review the 126 km-long section.[49]
An 18 km stretch of Leg 2, between
Quazigund and
Banihal, was authorised on 26 June 2013.[50] The stretch includes the 11.215-km (7-mile)
Pir Panjal Railway Tunnel, also known as the Banihal railway tunnel. India's longest rail tunnel, it is 8.4 m wide and 7.39 m high. The tunnel includes a 3 m-wide service road for maintenance and emergency use. Its average elevation, 1760 m, is 440 m below the existing road tunnel.[46]
The tunnel facilitates transportation during winter (when inclement weather closes the Srinagar-Jammu highway), and halves the distance between
Quazigund and Banihal (35 km by road and 17.5 km by train).[51] The Banihal railway station is 1,702 m (5,584 ft) above mean sea level, and trains run from Banihal to Qazigund through the tunnel. The 5 km
Banganga section was expected to be operational before the completion date of 2017–18 for the entire project.[52]
Status update of under construction 148 km route from Katra to Banihal.
Oct 2018: work on
Chenab Bridge have stopped due to difference of opinion between contractor and railway staff.[53]
Dec 2018: Rail line likely to miss 2020 deadline.[54]
Aug 2019: New target period for completion is 2021–22.[55]
July 2020: The Railways have completed the construction of over 20 out of 37 small and large bridges. The Union Railway Minister Piyush Goyal announced that the construction of this leg will be completed by August 2022.[56]
Aug 2022: 75% (28) of total 37 bridges and 97.6% of 35 tunnels (160.52 km out of total 164 km tunnel length completed, including 95.47 km of 27 main tunnels and 65.05 km of 8 escape tunnels) of tul completed. Cumulative spend on Katra-Banihal rail link up to June is INR23071 crore (~US$3 billion).[57] Chenab Railway Bridge - world's highest railway bridge also completed after its 'Golden joint' was launched on Chenab river and minor works on 1.3 km long bridge is expected to be completed by November 2022.[58]
Feb 2024: Banihal to Sangaldan half distance is opened for public and train runs from Baramulla to Sangaldan. The distance between the two stations is 183 k.m.s and takes around 4 hours and 30 minutes to complete.
Leg 3
Leg 3 has been operational since October 2009. The line from
Baramulla to Banihal, across the Pir Panjal Range, is 130 km long. Since the 25 km-long Udhampur-Katra section was commissioned in October 2013, only the 148 km Katra-Banihal section of Leg 2 remains to be constructed. Until the
Katra-Laole section of railway is finished by 2020, travel from
Jammu Tawi (or Udhampur) to Banihal by road and from Banihal to Srinagar by rail is possible.
The Banihal–Baramulla section is also being electrified, and track-electrification work has been in full swing since July 2020.
In June 2017 Ministry of Railways also laid the foundation stone of five new halt railway stations on the Banihal–Baramulla section i. e. Sangdan, Ratnipora, Razwan, Monghall and Nadigam but civil works of these stations has yet to start.[59]
Baramulla-Kupwara line: Rs 3843 crore 39-km-long extension of the railway line from Baramulla to
Kupwara was approved by the Central Government in Nov 2018.[60] In July 2020, the completed survey was submitted to the Railway Board.
Baramulla-Uri line: 50 km lone Railway extension from Baramulla to
Uri is planned. It will have following one existing and several new stations, existing
Baramulla railway station existing, Sheeri, Gantmulla, Boniyar, Limber, Nougram, Lagama and Uri. The third party consultant has submitted alignment approval report to the Northern Railway in September 2023 and the ariel and ground survey will commence soon.[61]
Infrastructure and construction
The line may be the most difficult rail project undertaken on the
Indian subcontinent. The young
Himalayas are geologically surprising and problematic.[7] The track's alignment presents one of the greatest railway engineering challenges ever faced; only
Tibet's
Qingzang Railway, completed in 2006 across permafrost and climbing to over 5,000 m (16,000 ft) above sea level, is comparable. Although the Indian temperatures are less severe, the region experiences harsh winters with heavy snowfall. In the Pir Panjal Range, most peaks exceed 15,000 ft (4,600 m) in height.
The route includes many bridges, viaducts and tunnels. The railway is expected to cross over 750 bridges and pass through over 100 km (62 mi) of tunnels, the longest of which is 11,215 m (6.969 mi).[7] Engineering challenges include crossing the
Chenab River on a 1,315-metre-long (4,314 ft) bridge 359 m (1,178 ft) above the riverbed and crossing the
Anji Khad on a 657-metre-long (2,156 ft) bridge 186 m (610 ft) above the riverbed.[62] The Chenab Bridge will be the highest railway structure of its kind in the world, 35 metres (115 ft) higher than the top of the
Eiffel Tower. Both bridges will be simple.
Weathering steel is planned for an environmentally-friendly appearance and to eliminate the need for painting. The design and structure is similar to
West Virginia's
New River Gorge Bridge. The project is managed by the
Konkan Railway Corporation. Completion was scheduled for 2012 (four years after the first isolated section of the route was opened for local passenger service), and it requires 26,000 tonnes of steel.
All tunnels are built with the
New Austrian tunnelling method, and a number of challenges have been encountered while tunnelling through the geologically-young, unstable
Sivalik Hills. In particular, water entered the Udhampur-to-Katra section; this required drastic solutions with steel arches and several feet of
shotcrete. Along with shotcrete, lattice girder support were provided according to different class of rocks found along the entire terrain of mountains in the proposed project.
Although the rail line is being built through a mountainous region, a one-percent
ruling gradient has been set to provide a safe, smooth, reliable journey.
Bank engines will not be required, making the journey quicker and smoother. It will use
5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm)
broad gauge continuous welded rail laid on concrete sleepers, with a minimum
curve radius of 676 m. The maximum speed will be 100 kilometres per hour (62 mph).[7] Provision for future doubling will be made on major bridges. Provisions for future electrification will also be made, although the rail line will use diesel locomotives initially; the region is presently electricity-scarce. There will be 30 stations on the route, initially served by 10–12 trains per day.
Closed-circuit television cameras at major bridges, tunnels and stations are planned, and all major bridges and tunnels are illuminated.
Rolling stock
Passenger service will be provided by high-power
diesel multiple units and heated, air-conditioned coaches have wide windows, sliding doors and reclining seats. The driver's cabin has a heating and defogging unit, and is fitted with a one-piece glass window for a wider view. A snow-cutting
cattle guard is attached to the front of the train to clear snow from the tracks during winter. Due to the valley's cold climate, the 1,400-
horsepower diesel engine has a heating system for quick, trouble-free starts. Coaches have a public-information system (display and announcements) and a
pneumaticsuspension for riding comfort. There is a compartment for the
physically disabled, with wider doors.[63]
Freight rolling stock for the route will come from the existing national fleet. Freight service (grain and petroleum products) will run between the 10–12 daily passenger trains. Maintenance will be done at the
Badgam workshop, north of Srinagar.
Three-aspect colour-light signalling is being installed on the route for safety, and
GSM-R equipment may be installed in the future to improve its quality.
Project agencies
Indian Railways is in charge of the 25-kilometre (16 mi) Udhampur-Katra section. The subsidiary
Konkan Railway Corporation is in charge of the 90-kilometre (56 mi) Katra-Laole section. This is arguably the line's most difficult portion, with over 92 percent tunnels or bridges—12 kilometres (7.5 mi) of bridges and 72 kilometres (45 mi) of tunnels.
Ircon International, a
public-sector company, is in charge of the 175-kilometre (109 mi) Dharam-Qazigund-Baramulla section. One hundred thirty-eight kilometres of the line, including the valley and the
Pir Panjal Railway Tunnel, is operational.
Hindustan Construction Company built the 11,215 m (6.969 mi) Pir Panjal tunnel through the range for about
₹900
crore.[64]Afcons Infrastructure Limited and South Korea's Ultra Engineering will design and build the
Chenab Bridge for around ₹974 crore.[65]Gammon India and South Africa's Archirodon Construction will build the
Anji Khad Bridge for ₹745 crore.
Construction-related casualties
June 2005 – Altaf Hussain, a Hindustan Construction Company (HCC) labour, was killed by a tunnel collapse in Tathyar; two others were injured.
16 May 2007 – Two girls, ages nine and seven, drowned in an excavated ditch.
14 Feb 2008 – A Nepali labour named Tika Ram Balwari was killed after being struck by a boulder in the Uri Varmul.
18 Apr 2008 – Late at night while working on the Katra-Qazigund project, a dump truck rolled into a deep gorge in Lower Juda More (near Kouri in
Reasi district). Tara Chand Singh, driver of the tipper including five other labours namely Resham Singh and Shambhu Ram, residents of Pattian in Reasi, Dhani Ram, Sandeep Lal and Vishno, residents of Nepal were killed and two others were injured.[66][67]
27 Mar 2011 – Two workers, Abdul Rahman (age 34) and Jumma Baksh (24) were killed at a railway bridge under construction over the Chenab River in the Reasi district when the basket in which they were riding (attached to a crane) unhooked and fell over 100 metres.[68]
^
abcdeHarish Kunwar.
"Train-Link for J & K Prosperity". Press Release, Press Information Bureau, Government of India, dated 2008-10-16. Retrieved 25 November 2008.