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Broadmeadow railway yard and ARTC Central Traffic Control
Australian Rail Track Corporation is a federal government owned corporation established in 1997 that owns, leases, maintains and controls the majority of main line standard gauge railway lines on the mainland of Australia, known as the Defined Interstate Rail Network (DIRN).
HistoryThe Interstate railway infrastructure, owned by Australian National's "Track Access", was transferred to the Federal Government-owned Australian Rail Track Corporation in 1998[1]. This consists of the track from Kalgoorlie to Broken Hill and Serviceton, Victoria. The Tarcoola to Alice Springs line was transferred to the AdRail Consortium (now part of FreightLink) as part of a deal to build the railway between Alice Springs and Darwin in 2000. The ARTC also manages, under lease, the interstate standard gauge rail network in New South Wales and Victoria, and has rights to sell access between Kalgoorlie and Kwinana to interstate rail operators under a wholesale access agreement with the WA track owner and operator, WestNet Rail. It also "has a working relationship with Queensland Rail about the use of the 127 kilometres of standard gauge line between the Queensland border and Fishermans Island".[2] Upgrade funding in NSWThe Australian and NSW Governments agreed in 2003 that the Australian Rail Track Corporation would lease the NSW interstate and Hunter Valley networks for 60 years. As part of this agreement the ARTC agreed to the investment of [3]:
The funding sources for the investment included an Australian Government equity injection into ARTC of $143 million and a funding contribution of almost $62 million by the New South Wales Government. Plans for Victoria
ARTC are currently laying concrete sleepers along the standard gauge track from Melbourne to Sydney and on to Brisbane. They are also adding or extending crossing loops along stretches of single track.[4] However, the ARTC lease of the Victorian standard gauge lines is almost up for renegotiation. As part of this process, many argue that the Broad Gauge line from Seymour to Albury is both rundown and underutilised and should be leased to the ARTC for total conversion to Standard Gauge. This would benefit trains using the busy freight line from Melbourne to Sydney by having long sections of dual track.[5] As a consequence of such a proposal:
Such a change may also encourage further sections of Victoria's Broad Gauge Freight track to be standardised.[5] In May 2008 the conversion of 200km of broad gauge track to standard gauge between Seymour and Albury was announced, in addition to construction of a five kilometre Wodonga Rail Bypass.[6] Costing $501.3 million, the Victorian Government is contributing $171.3 million, the Australian Government is investing $45 million and the Australian Rail Track Corporation will contribute $285 million and will assume responsibility for the ongoing operation of the new north-east standard gauge rail line under a 45-year lease agreement with Victoria.[7] ResponsibilitiesARTC does not operate any passenger or freight trains running on its tracks, but rather provides and maintains the infrastructure to enable any qualified train operator to run trains on designated train paths. The tracks controlled by ARTC are located in four states, which were previously controlled by 5 separate state railways, in a somewhat uncoordinated fashion that has given the edge to road transport. By combining the infrastructure under one corporation it is expected that a more coordinated one stop shop will be created. ARTC does not control any of the narrow gauge track in Queensland or South Australia, nor broad gauge track in Victoria. ARTC owned rail corridors
ARTC leased corridors
ARTC also manages the non-DIRN rural rail lines in New South Wales on behalf of the NSW state government. See alsoReferences
External links
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