- Rail transport in Germany
As of 2005 ,Germany had a railway network of 41,315 km. 19,857 km are electrified. The total track length was 76,473 km. TheUIC Country Code for the German railway system is 80.Deutsche Bahn andca. 150 private railway companies operated a total of 23,496 powered rail vehiclesFederal Statistical Office of Germany, Fachserie 8, Reihe 2.1: Verkehr, Eisenbahnverkehr/Betriebsdaten des Schienenverkehrs 2006] :In 2006, railways in Germany carried ca. 119,968,000 passengers in long-distance trains (at an average distance of 288 km), and 2,091,828,000 passengers in short-distance trains (21 km on average). In the same year they carried 346,118,000 tonnes of goods at an average distance of 309 km.Federal Statistical Office of Germany, Fachserie 8, Reihe 2: Verkehr, Eisenbahnverkehr 2006]
Deutsche Bahn (state-owned) is the main provider of railway service. In recent years a number of competitors have started business. They mostly offer state-subsidized regional services, but some, like
Connex offer long-distance services as well.*
Deutsche Bahn long distance trains
**InterCityExpress (high speed train either national or on some routes to theNetherlands ,Belgium ,Switzerland ,Austria ,France andDenmark .
**EuroCity (international long-distance trains)
**InterCity (national long-distance trains)
**EuroNight (international night trains)
**DB NachtZug (national and international night trains)
**UrlaubsExpress (national night trains to the Alps and the Baltic Sea during vacation times)The
InterRegio services, introduced in 1988 and replacing the formerSchnellzug and theInterCity , have been abolished in 2003. Generally Deutsche Bahn increases the percentage of InterCityExpress services, gradually downgrading the remaining InterCity services into the role formerly played by InterRegio.*
Veolia Verkehr (offers services on former Interregio routes)
**Interconnex
**Harz-Berlin-Express
**Ostseeland Express*
Thalys (high-speed train toBelgium andFrance ; adapted FrenchTGV )
*Cisalpino (toItaly , service discontinued mid-December 2006)*
Regional rail andlocal rail traffic is ordered and paid for (as the fares usually do not cover the expenses) by the federal states. Usual procedure under EU legislation is to award the contract to the lowest bid by means of a tender procedure. The respective states are free to announce short- or long-term contracts as well as to stipulate further conditions e. g. on rolling stock. In the past years, many bids were won by private rail companies likeNordWestBahn orPrignitzer Eisenbahn , although some states have awarded long-term contracts to localDB Regio subsidiaries. The train types for regional and local traffic are:
**RegionalExpress (medium-distance semi-fast trains for regional services)
**RegionalBahn (basic local service, usually calling at all stations)
**S-Bahn (suburban rail transport offered mainly by Deutsche Bahn, sometimes by others)
**U-Bahn (underground)
**Tram (light rail services, sometimes including underground passages in the city centers)ee also
*
Rail transport by country
*Transportation in Germany
*History of rail transport in Germany
*German steam locomotive classification References
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