Tatanagar–Bilaspur section explained

Box Width:28em
Tatanagar–Bilaspur section
Color:800000
System:Electrified
Status:Operational
Electrification:Yes
Tracklength:Main line: 4680NaN0
Branch lines:
Champa–Gevra Road: 500NaN0
Bondamunda–Barsuan: 700NaN0
Rajkharswan–Gua: 1060NaN0
Padapahar–Jakhapura: 2240NaN0
Map State:collapsed

The Tatanagar–Bilaspur section is part of the Howrah–Nagpur–Mumbai line and connects in the Indian state of Jharkhand and in Chhattisgarh. Part of one of the major trunk lines in the country, it passes through an industrial-mining area and handles high volumes of freight, particularly coal and iron ore.

Geography

The Tatanagar–Bilaspur section of Howrah–Nagpur–Mumbai line passes through the Saranda forest on the Chota Nagpur Plateau in southern Jharkhand. The area through which it passes includes portions of northern Odisha and northern Chhattisgarh, with topography similar to that of the Chota Nagpur Plateau. It is generally forested area amidst hills alternating with valleys. The major rivers flowing through the area are: Subarnarekha, Kharkai, South Karo, South Koel, Sankh, Brahmani, Ib, Mand and Hasdeo. While the eastern portion of this line connects to iron ore mines spread on both sides of the Jharkhand–Odisha border, the western portion caters to the Ib Valley Coalfield in Odisha and the Korba Coalfield in Chhattisgarh. There are three steel plants in the area: the Jamshedpur Works of Tata Steel, Rourkela Steel Plant of SAIL and Jindal Steel and Power at Raigarh. Bharat Aluminium Company has its plant at Korba. There are several engineering units on this line, as for example Tata Motors at Jamshedpur, Tata Growth Shop and Tayo Rolls at Adityapur, and Larsen & Toubro at Kansbahal. The line extends support to numerous cement plants, power plants, refractory units, ferro alloy plants and a paper mill.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

Kalinganagar is an upcoming industrial hub in Odisha.[7] [8]

History

The Howrah–Allahabad–Mumbai line, a joint effort of Great Indian Peninsula Railway and East Indian Railway Company came up in 1870.[9] The Bengal Nagpur Railway was formed in 1887 for the purpose of upgrading the Nagpur Chhattisgarh Railway and then extending it via Bilaspur to Asansol, in order to develop a shorter Howrah–Mumbai route than the one via Allahabad.[10] The Bengal Nagpur Railway main line from Nagpur to Asansol, on the Howrah–Delhi main line, was opened for goods traffic on 1 February 1891.[11]

One of the last hurdles for the track was construction of the Saranda Tunnel. It was completed on 1 October 1892.[11] The tunnel pierces the narrow divide between the Subarnarekha and the Brahmani basins.[12]

The 50.70NaN0 long broad gauge Champa–Korba–Gevra Road branch line was constructed between 1953 and 1956.[13]

Railway reorganization

The Bengal Nagpur Railway was nationalized in 1944.[11] Eastern Railway was formed on 14 April 1952 with the portion of East Indian Railway Company east of Mughalsarai and the Bengal Nagpur Railway.[14] In 1955, South Eastern Railway was carved out of Eastern Railway. It comprised lines mostly operated by BNR earlier.[14] [15] Amongst the new zones started in April 2003 were East Coast Railway and South East Central Railway. Both these railways were carved out of South Eastern Railway.[14]

Jurisdiction

The mainline from Tatanagar to Jharsuguda, and all branch lines within this portion except Juruli–Jakhapura section are within the jurisdiction of Chakradharpur railway division of South Eastern Railway. The Ib–Bilaspur section of the mainline is under the jurisdiction of Bilaspur railway division of South East Central Railway. Juruli–Jakhapura section is under the jurisdiction of East Coast railway.[16]

Movement of steel plant raw materials

Frontline paid rich tributes to Bengal Nagpur Railway/South Eastern Railway:[17]

"As it expanded its network at a rapid pace to help in the exploitation of the rich mineral resources in the region. New lines were laid and connections made to facilitate the movement of iron ore to the new steel plants – TISCO and IISCO at Tatanagar and Burnpur respectively. To tap the coal reserves in Jharia, a 115-mile-long (184 km) line connecting Midnapore with Bhojudih was set up in 1903 and extended to Gomoh in 1907. In 1922, the Talcher coalfields were linked by a rail line taking off from Nergundi on the East Coast. The Raipur-Vizianagaram link was completed in 1931, connecting the East Coast with the Central Province. Following these developments, the BNR Company owned the largest narrow gauge network in the country… "As independent India embarked on a policy of rapid industrialisation, the SER took upon the task of moving raw materials by constructing new lines from plants to the mine heads at Dallhirajra, Ahiwara, Barsuan, Kiriburu and Meghataburu. Doubling of sections and progressive electrification were taken up along with the setting up of marshalling yards and exchange yards to meet the demands of the steel sector."

Electrification

The entire line is electrified but that came in stages.[1] The Purulia–Chakradharpur, Kandra–Gomharria, Sini–Adityapur, Adityapur–Tatanagar, Chakradharpur–Manoharpur and Manoharpur–Rourkela sections were electrified in 1961–62. The Rourkela–Jharsuguda, Jharsuguda–Raigarh and Raigarh–Bilaspur sections were electrified in 1969–70.[18]

Amongst the branch lines the Rajkharsawan–Dangoaposi section was electrified in 1960–61. It was extended to Noamundi in 1965–66. The Padapahar–Deojhar and Noamundi–Barajamda sections were electrified in 1966–67, and the same year electrification was extended to Gua and Bolanikhadan.[18] The branch line between Rajkharswan and Dongoaposi was amongst the first routes on the Indian Railways to be electrified with 25 kV-AC traction.[1] The Bondamunda–Lathikata and Lathikata–Chandiposh sections were electrified in 1996–97 and electrification was extended to Bimalagarh in 1997–1998. It was further extended to Barsuan and Rangra the same year.[18]

The Rourkela–Biramitrapur section was electrified in 1964–65.[18]

The Champa–Korba section was electrified in 1987–88 and electrification was extended to Gevra Road in 1988–89.[18]

Passenger movement

Tatanagar, Rourkela and Bilaspur on this line are amongst the top hundred booking stations of Indian Railway.[19]

Freight traffic

Iron ore

Iron ore is the second largest commodity moved by the railways in India, accounting for 16% of total freight traffic. (Coal is number one with a 43% share). 116 million million tonnes of iron ore was moved in 2006–07 which included 38.84 million tonnes of iron ore for export.[20]

In 2010–11 South-East Railway earned Rs 8,187 crore in freight charges, of which Rs 5,135 crore was from iron ore transportation. Apart from domestic consumption, iron ore from the mines in Odisha and Jharkhand is exported through Haldia, Visakhapatnam, Paradeep and Gangavaram ports.[21]

Bengal Iron and Steel Co. started iron mining at Pansiraburu in their Duia mines in 1901. Initially the iron ore was transported over hilly terrain and through thick forests in bullock carts to the nearest rail head at Manoharpur. The ore was consumed in the Kulti Works, which then produced iron. In 1910, the Manoharpur Light Railway was built from Manoharpur to the foot of Pansira Buru. It was extended to Chiria in 1916.[22] A 640NaN0 branch line from Tatanagar to Gorumahisani (on the Asansol–Tatanagar–Kharagpur line) was opened to traffic in 1911 mainly for transportation of iron ore.[11] The Rajkharswan–Dongoaposi line was opened in 1924 and extended to Gua in 1925, primarily to transport iron ore and manganese ore for IISCO Steel Plant at Burnpur.[11] In 1936, the Manoharpur Light Railway owned 34 locomotives, 5 railcars and 360 goods wagons.[23]

Tata Steel started the iron mines at Noamundi in 1925 and that has been the major source of its iron ore for many years. It has also been getting iron ore from its Joda mines for around half a century.[24] [25] The 28.050NaN0 long broad gauge Noamundi–Banspani line was constructed between 1956 and 1958.[13]

The Jhakpura–Daitari line was opened for traffic in 1977[11] and the Banspani–Tomka line was added in 1998.[26]

Rourkela was connected to Barsuan iron ore mines (the township is Tensa) in 1960 and the line was extended to Kiriburu in 1963.[27]

Barsuan, commissioned in 1960, Kiriburu, commissioned in 1964, Meghahatuburu, commissioned in 1985, and Bolani, commissioned in 1960, are iron ore mines on this track administered by the Raw Materials Division of Steel Authority of India. Numerous private operators are engaged in iron ore mining, quite often for exports.[28] [29] [30] [31]

Construction of the line between Jakhapura, on the Howrah–Chennai line, and Daitari was sanctioned in 1976–77. It was commissioned in 1981. The 1520NaN0-long Daitari–Banspani line was sanctioned in 1992–93 to facilitate transportation of iron ore for export through Paradip Port. The Banspani–Kendujhar section was operational in 2004. The Kendujhar–Tomka section was operational in 2007. Passenger trains started plying on this route in 2009.[32] [33] [34]

Coal

The Gevra mine of the Korba Coalfield, the largest open cast mine in Asia, is served by the Champa–Gevra Road branch line.[35] [36] [37] [38] As of 2011 Gevra mine had a capacity of 35 million tonnes per annum and along with Dipka and Kusmunda mine the area had a total annual capacity of 70 million tonnes.[39]

The 2010 production level of the Ib Valley Coalfield, served by this line, was 38 million tonnes but was expected to rise sharply over the years.[38] [40]

The Mand Raigarh Coalfield does not have a rail link (as of 2012). Construction of the 1800NaN0-long Bhupdeopur–Korichhapar/Baroud–Dharamjaygarh with an extension up to the Champa–Korba branch line is essential for the transportation of around 100 million tonnes of coal planned annually from Mand Raigarh Coalfield. South Eastern Coalfields Limited will fund this project. Construction of the 520NaN0 long Jharsuguda–Barpalli rail line is essential for transportation of coal from the Ib Valley Coalfield with a potential of 90 million tonnes per annum. Mahanadi Coalfields Limited will fund this project.[41]

South East Central Railway, the railway zone handling coal transportation mentioned above, is the largest freight-loading zonal railway in India. It handled a revenue-earning freight traffic of 150.7 million tonnes in 2011–12 and the coal throughput was 112.5 million tonnes (against 104.4 million tonnes in the previous financial year).[42]

Speed limits

The entire Howrah–Nagpur–Mumbai line is classified as a "Group A" line which can take speeds up to 130 km/h. The Rajakharshwan–Dongoaposi–Padapahar–Barajamda–Gua, Bondamunda–Bimlagarh–Barsuan–Kiriburu, Kandra–Gamharria, Champa–Gevra Road and Padapahar–Banspani branch lines are classified as "Group E Special" lines where traffic density is very high or likely to grow substantially in future and the present sanctioned speed is less than 100 km/h.[43]

New line surveys

New line surveys of Indian Railway to be taken up during 2012–13 in this section include Champa–Abhimanpur bypass line, Bilaspur–Dongargarh via Uslapur Mungeli, Korba–Ranchi, Renukoot–Korba via Ambikapur Katghora, Bilaspur–Gatora–Dipka–Katghora, Pendra–Gevra Road via Katghora, Banspani–Barbil, Banspani–Barsuan.[44]

New railway station project

Shifting of Banspani station to Joda Town.Amid a growing demand for shifting of Banspani railway station to Joda Town of Keonjhar district of Odisha, a delegation from the railways visited the area Thursday 10 May 2019.

Banspani is considered an important railway station of Joda Mining Sector of Odisha, under South Eastern railway in terms of freight services. Daily, lakhs of tonnes of minerals are transported from this station to various parts of the country. Even passengers trains operate to various major destinations like Kacheguda(Hyderabad), Visakhapattanam, Bhubaneswar, Tatanagar, Rourkela. But distance between town and the station is creating issue due to improper distance, and pollution.

A delegation of the railways led by top officials like SK Singh, GK Sahu took stock of the area from Banspani to Bachu Hutting on 10/05/2019.

"If the railway station is shifted to Joda town, passengers will feel it easy, and it can be a major station of this region in future." they added.

Head of the delegation SK Singh said that technical aspect of the proposal is being checked and a report will be submitted to the higher authorities soon.

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chakradharpur Division. South Eastern Railway. 2012-11-10.
  2. Web site: Bilaspur – the pride of Chhattisgarh . Bilaspur district administration . 2012-11-10 .
  3. Web site: Korba – the Power Hub of Chhattisgarh . Korba district administration . 2012-11-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121017233743/http://korba.gov.in/ataglancefs.htm . 17 October 2012 . dmy-all .
  4. Web site: Explore Orissa – the soul of India. Orissa Tourism. 2012-11-10. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20121104080743/http://www.orissatourism.gov.in/rourkela.html. 4 November 2012. dmy-all.
  5. Web site: The District Portal of Kendujhar. Kendujhar district administration . 2012-11-10 .
  6. Web site: Sundergarh District . Geography and Physical Features. Sundergarh district administration. 2012-11-10.
  7. Web site: Orissa promises New Year bailout package to steel units in Kalinga Nagar. Patnaik. Nageshwar. The Economic Times. 24 December 2010. 2012-11-10 .
  8. Web site: Vision Kalinganagar : To be developed for a population of 10 lakhs by 2025. 2012-11-10.
  9. Web site: IR History: Early Days – II . Chronology of railways in India, Part 2 (1870–1899). 2012-11-10 .
  10. Web site: Number 1 Down Mail. Railways of the Raj. 2012-11-10 .
  11. Web site: Major Events in the Formation of S.E. Railway. South Eastern Railway. 2012-11-10. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130401151628/http://www.ser.indianrailways.gov.in/view_section.jsp?lang=0&id=0%2C1. 1 April 2013. dmy-all.
  12. Web site: The West Singhbhum District . River System . 2012-11-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110713104524/http://www.jharkhandforest.com/files/Chaibasa_Introduction.pdf . 13 July 2011 . dmy-all .
  13. Book: Moonis Raza & Yash Aggarwal. Transport Geography of India: Commodity Flow and the Regional Structure of Indian Economy. page 60. 1986. Concept Publishing Company, A-15/16 Commercial Block, Mohan Garden, New Delhi – 110059. 81-7022-089-0. 2 May 2013.
  14. Web site: Geography – Railway Zones. IRFCA. 2012-11-21 .
  15. Web site: IR History: Part - IV (1947 - 1970). IRFCA. 2012-11-21.
  16. Web site: Jurisdiction of railway divisions. South Eastern Railway . 2012-11-21.
  17. Web site: South Eastern Railway – A Saga of Performance . Chattopadhyay . Suhrid Sankar . Frontline. 22. 8, 12–25 March 2005. 2012-11-25 .
  18. Web site: History of Electrification. IRFCA. 2012-11-10 .
  19. Web site: Indian Railways Passenger Reservation Enquiry . Availability in trains for Top 100 Booking Stations of Indian Railways . IRFCA . 2012-11-21 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20140510115649/http://www.indianrail.gov.in/7days_Avl.html . 10 May 2014 .
  20. Web site: Logistics of Iron Ore Transportation in India. KK Kumar. 31 March 2009 . slideshare . 2012-11-10.
  21. Web site: Railways losing thousands of crores in ore fraud. https://archive.today/20130103130518/http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-10-06/india/30250269_1_iron-ore-railway-freight-indian-railways . dead . 3 January 2013 . 6 October 2011. . 2012-11-10.
  22. N. R. Srinivasan, History of The Indian Iron and Steel Company, 1983, PR Deptt, IISCO, p.46.
  23. Book: World Survey of Foreign Railways . 1936 . Transportation Division, Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, Washington D.C.. English . 226b.
  24. Web site: Raw Materials . Iron ore mining . Tata Steel. 2012-11-10.
  25. Web site: Task Force Inspections of Odisha Mines . Indian Bureau of Mines . 2012-11-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121026113959/http://ibm.nic.in/illegalmining_orissastate.htm . 26 October 2012 . dmy-all .
  26. Web site: Banspani Tomka new railway line. 20 August 1998 . Asian Development Bank . 2012-11-10.
  27. Web site: Bondamunda Junction. 2012-11-13.
  28. Web site: Rungta Mines . 2012-11-10 .
  29. Web site: Creating Value. Touching Lives . Essel Mining and Industries Limited. Aditya Birla Group . 2012-11-10.
  30. Web site: Adhunik to float mining arm, to raise Rs. 1,000 crore. DNA. 29 October 2012 . 2012-11-10.
  31. Web site: Aryan Mining & Trading Corporation Pvt. Ltd. . Aryan Group . 2012-11-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120919095834/http://aryanmining.in/about.asp . 19 September 2012 . dmy-all .
  32. Web site: Daitari-Keonjhar-Banspani line -- Early completion of rail project stressed. Dey. Nilanjan. The Hindu Business Line. 12 February 2002 . 2012-11-10 .
  33. Web site: Up gradation of existing Jakhapura-Daitari line. 2012-11-10.
  34. Web site: Daitari-Banspani . East Coast Railway. 2012-11-10.
  35. Web site: Korba – the land of black diamond, kosa silk and thermal power. Mineral Resources. Korba district administration. 2012-11-10. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110721172537/http://korba.nic.in/kwMines.htm. 21 July 2011. dmy-all.
  36. Book: Geoenvironmental reclamation: International Symposium . p. 413. 9789058092199 . 2012-11-10. Paithankar . A. G. . Agarwal . R. K. . Jha . Pramod Kumar . January 2001 . A.A. Balkema .
  37. Web site: Miners work at the Gevra coalmines in the central Indian state .... Space . 2012-11-10.
  38. Web site: Improve Railways' coal delivery for better returns. Sanyal. Santanu . The Hindu Business Line. 22 July 2012. 2012-11-10.
  39. Web site: Action Plan – Development of Comprehensive Environmental Pollution Abatement Action Plan for Critically Polluted Area Korba. January 2011. Chhattisgarh Environment Conservation Board . 2012-11-10.
  40. Web site: Master Plan of Ib Valley Coalfield of MCL (July 2010). Infraline Energy. 2012-11-10.
  41. Web site: 290 MT Coal evacuation hampered due to lack of rail infrastructure. Mehdudia . Sujay. The Hindu Business Line. 22 September 2012. 2012-11-10.
  42. Web site: South-East Central Railway posts 7% growth in freight loading in 2011-12 . Sanyal. Santanu . The Hindu Business Line. 9 April 2012. 2012-11-10.
  43. Web site: Chapter II – The Maintenance of Permanent Way. 2012-11-10.
  44. Web site: What is new in Railway Budget 2012-13. The Times of India. 14 March 2012. 2012-11-10.