Rail transport in Sweden
Sweden | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Operation | |||||
National railway | SJ | ||||
Infrastructure company | Swedish Transport Administration | ||||
System length | |||||
Total | 12,821 kilometres (7,967 mi) | ||||
Double track | 1,152 kilometres (716 mi) | ||||
Electrified | 7,918 kilometres (4,920 mi) | ||||
Track gauge | |||||
Main | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) | ||||
891 mm (2 ft 11+3⁄32 in) | 221 kilometres (137 mi) | ||||
Electrification | |||||
Main | 15 kV 16.7 Hz AC | ||||
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Rail transport in Sweden uses a network of 13,000 km of track, the 21st largest in the world. Construction of the first railway line in Sweden began in 1855. The major operator is the state-owned SJ AB.
In 1988, prompted by SJ's large deficits, the Swedish parliament privatised the network by ordering that the ownership of rail infrastructure ownership be separated from the ownership of train operations, and opened up the system to private sector train operators by introducing competitive tendering for local rail service contracts.[1]
Sweden is a member of the International Union of Railways (UIC). The UIC Country Code for Sweden is 74.
Operators
Major national passenger train operators SJ AB (usually just called SJ), and the cargo transport operator, Green Cargo, are both fully owned by the state. A private company Tågkompaniet operates in central Sweden, and there are a number of regional companies. Tram systems are used in Gothenburg, Norrköping and Stockholm. There is a metro system in Stockholm, the Stockholm Metro.
While most current railway lines of Sweden were decided and built by the state, and receive their technical upkeep from the public as well, SJ no longer holds a monopoly on operating and owning passenger trains where such can be run profitably on a commercial basis. Large parts of the rail network serve parts of the country which don't generate enough passenger or cargo traffic to make a profit, and on some of these stretches SJ has held a de facto monopoly until very recently (2010, see below in this section) Average speed is an important factor regarding profitability (more distance per hour means more income per hour).
For regional trains (within a county or up to about 100 km distance) the counties will buy traffic, signing a contract with an operator. The operator is often SJ, but sometimes another operator, either Swedish or from one of the other EU countries, provides the service. For these regional trains the county transport authority sells tickets. For long-distance trains (i.e. longer than the regional trains) that are not profitable, a national authority "Rikstrafiken" signs a contract with an operator to move traffic on each line (Public Service Obligation). In this case each operator markets and sell tickets. The operator for unprofitable services usually rents trains from the county transport authority or a special state organisation. This is because trains are expensive, take from two to three years to buy (from tender to delivery), and are hard to sell if the operator loses the contract. However, for the SJ monopoly traffic, SJ usually own the trains.
A decision was made in March 2009 to cancel the monopoly for SJ. Already in the autumn 2009 free competition will be allowed on Saturdays and Sundays when there is more room on the tracks, and to a full extent all days in the autumn 2010.
Rail traffic is supervised by the Swedish Transport Administration (Trafikverket), a government agency.
History
The first Swedish railroad for public transport using horse-drawn carriages, the Frykstads railroad in Värmland was opened in 1849.
In 1853 the Riksdag of the Estates decided that the State would build main line railways, but that other lines would be built by private enterprises (often with cities as main owners), and in 1856 the first stretch, between Örebro and Nora (a private railroad), was opened for traffic.
The main line railways were of major importance for the development of the Swedish industry. The first two main line railways were the Southern, stretching from Stockholm to Malmö in the south, and the Western, to Gothenburg in the west. These line railways were finished between 1860-1864. The Northern railway runs parallel to the Baltic coast (but not along it) up to Boden in northern Sweden, and was finished in 1894. The Inland Railway runs from Gällivare in the north to Kristinehamn in the center of the country, through the central parts of northern Sweden, and was built between 1908-1937. It was a part of the 1853 decision that the railways should avoid coasts, and not make detours to pass medium size cities along the route. The reason for avoiding coasts (most evident for the railway to northern Sweden) was to protect it from military attacks, and because steam boats were already established along the coasts as a much faster transport method than before.
The construction of the early main lines provided a fast and safe connection from the mines in the north to the rest of Sweden. It also facilitated business (and private) travel, which had earlier required horse-drawn carriages. Roslagsbanan is the oldest electrified railway line for personnel transportation in northern Europe. Malmbanan, the railway line between Luleå, Sweden, and Narvik, Norway was inaugurated on July 14, 1903. The stretch between Kiruna and Riksgränsen was the first major railway line in Sweden to be electrified in 1915.
Network
- Total: 12,821 km (includes 3,594 km of privately owned railways)
- standard gauge: 12,821 km of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) gauge (7,918 km electrified and 1,152 km double track (1998)
- narrow gauge: 221 km of 891 mm (2 ft 11+3⁄32 in) (Swedish three foot) gauge (2001)
Main lines
There used to be six main lines (stambanor), all nationally owned:
- Västra stambanan (Western main line), 453 km, Stockholm-Gothenburg through Katrineholm-Hallsberg-Laxå-Falköping
- Södra stambanan (Southern main line), 381 km, Malmö-Falköping through Nässjö-Jönköping
- Östra stambanan (Eastern main line), 216 km, Nässjö-Katrineholm through Mjölby-Linköping-Norrköping)
- Norra stambanan (Northern main line), 484 km, Stockholm-Ånge through Uppsala-Avesta Krylbo
- Stambanan genom övre Norrland (Main line through upper Norrland), 629 km, Bräcke-Boden through Långsele-Vännäs
- Nordvästra stambanan (Northwestern main line), 209 km, Laxå-Norwegian border through Karlstad-Kil-Charlottenberg
Also these lines have for a period been called main lines:
- Mittbanan (Norrland cross line), about 500 km, Sundsvall-Norwegian border through Ånge-Östersund
- Inlandsbanan, about 1300 km, Kristinehamn-Gällivare through Mora-Östersund
The principle was that the main lines were built by the state, but all others by private companies, often owned by cities to support their local need. In the period 1930-1950 most lines were purchased by the state, making the main line term less well defined.
Today, changes have been made in the terminology making the number of main lines four. The northwestern main line is not considered a main line anymore and is renamed Värmlandsbanan. The southern main line between Nässjö and Falköping is also degraded since now what was the Eastern main line (Nässjö - Katrineholm) is considered a part of the southern one. The Norrland cross line is not a main line anymore, but a regional railway. Finally the northern main line south of Ockelbo refers to another and shorter way than that through Avesta. Sometimes the Ostkustbanan Stockholm-Sundsvall is now considererd a main line, since it has the majority of the passenger traffic into Norrland. Inlandsbanan was considered a main line for a few decades, but is now a tourist railway only. The main lines are still owned by the state, except Inlandsbanan which is owned by the counties.
Railway links with adjacent countries
- Denmark - yes - same gauge - voltage change 15kVAC/25kVAC - Øresund Bridge and train ferry Göteborg - Frederikshavn.
- Finland - yes, but break-of-gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in)/1,524 mm (5 ft) (short dual gauge track between the two stations closest to the border, without overhead lines. Train ferry Stockholm - Turku (Finland).
- Germany - yes - train ferry - same gauge - no electric propulsion on board. Train ferry Malmö - Travemünde, Trelleborg - Sassnitz(Mukran) and Trelleborg - Rostock.[2]
- Norway - yes - same gauge - same voltage (three electric lines and one non-electric)
- Poland - yes, train ferry Ystad - Świnoujście - same gauge - no electric propulsion on board.
Sweden and Norway have the same ATC system and the same voltage, meaning that trains can generally cross the border without being specially modified. Sweden and Denmark have different ATC systems and different voltage, so only specially modified trains can cross the border. The Oresundtrains (X31) and some of the X2000 trains can do that.
Train ferries never have electric overhead lines on board, so diesel must be used to get trains onboard/offboard. Generally locomotives are not transported on these ferries, only train cars.
International passenger trains today (2016) operate on rather few lines:
- Norway
- From Oslo to Gothenburg and to Stockholm
- From Narvik to Stockholm via Kiruna
- From Trondheim to Storlien
- Denmark
- From Copenhagen via Øresund bridge to Malmö, to Stockholm, to Gothenburg and to Ystad
- Germany
- From Berlin via train ferry to Malmö
No passenger trains operate between Finland or Sweden, neither through Haparanda/Tornio nor train ferry to Turku.
Swedish railway network
Current lines
See also
- Rail transport by country
- High-speed rail in Sweden
- Transportation in Sweden
- Rail transport in Europe
References
External links
- Swedish Transport Administration
- Official site of Swedish Railways, Statens järnvägars
- For Eurail and Sweden Rail Passes
- Search engine for all public transport inside Sweden
- Sweden Eurail Pass & Eurorail
- Winchester, Clarence, ed. (1936), "Sweden's rail system", Railway Wonders of the World, pp. 1161–1165 illustrated description of the Swedish system in the 1930s