2004 Derailment of Joetsu Shinkansen

The Derailment of Jōetsu Shinkansen (上越新幹線脱線事故), occurred when a bullet train derailed on October 23, 2004 as earthquakes in Chūetsu region, Niigata Prefecture, Japan. It is first derailment accident on commercial operations of Shinkansen (high speed rail in Japan).

Derailment of
Jōetsu Shinkansen
Details
DateOctober 20, 2004
17:56 (JST)
LocationBetween Urasa Station and Nagaoka Station
CountryJapan
LineJōetsu Shinkansen
OperatorEast Japan Railway Company
Incident typeDerailment
Cause2004 Chūetsu earthquake
Statistics
Trains1
PassengersApprox 155
Deaths0
Injured0

Summary

At JST 17:56 October 23, 2004, an earthquake occurred, the epicenter near a 200 series Shinkansen train carrying about 155 passengers between Urasa Station and Nagaoka Station of Jōetsu Shinkansen, the north entrance of Takiya Tunnel. The train, which was heading for Niigata Prefecture from Tokyo with train number "Toki 325 (とき325号)", had 8 of 10 cars (except cars 6 and 7) derailed due to the earthquake.

As the earthquake occurred, the trains were running with a speed of 200 km/h for Nagaoka, the emergency braking system started to work immediately at the alert of the earthquake. This is the first derailment of Shinkansen ever since the operation of Tōkaidō Shinkansen in October 1964.

The derailment caused no injuries or deaths.

Aftermath

The aftershocks continued to occur at Niigata region afterward, causing great difficulty in cleaning derailment wrecks. By November 18, 2004, the train wreck had been cleared and operations were resumed on December 28. Due to severe damage, the train was abandoned from service on February 25, 2005, and replaced by E2 Series Shinkansen

Investigation

On November 30, 2007, Japanese Aircraft and Railway Accidents Investigation Commission released the official report regarding to this derailment of Jōetsu Shinkansen, and it gave advice readjusting the operations of Shinkansen.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.