Ferrocarriles de Cuba

Ferrocarriles de Cuba

Railway map of Cuba
Reporting mark FFC (also: FC, FFCC)
Locale Cuba
Dates of operation 1924
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Electrification 140 km
Length 4,226 km (2,626 mi)
Headquarters Havana
Cuban rail network for passenger transportation

Ferrocarriles de Cuba (FCC) or Ferrocarriles Nacionales de Cuba (English: National Railway Company of Cuba), the only railway operating in the Caribbean islands, provides passenger and freight services for Cuba.

Route network

Ferrocarriles de Cuba uses 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) (standard gauge) that extends from Guane (province Pinar del Río) in the westernmost part of the island up to the bay of Guantánamo in the eastern part. The 835 km central railway runs from Havana to Santiago de Cuba in the eastern region. Most of the 4,226 km is diesel with 140 km electrified. The flagship Train Number 1 travels between Havana and Santiago de Cuba. Other long distance passenger services link Havana to Pinar del Río (western railway), Cienfuegos (South branch), Sancti Spiritus, Bayamo-Manzanillo and Guantanamo. The network connects the six first level ports in Cuba: Havana, Mariel, Matanzas, Cienfuegos, Nuevitas and Santiago de Cuba, as well as all province capital cities.

The Hershey Electric Railway is an electrified railway from Havana to Matanzas that was built by the Hershey Company in order to transport workers and products after it had bought sugar plantations in 1916. It is a commuter service running in northern Havana and Matanzas provinces using some original equipment.[1]

History

Colonial Cuba

In 1836 Gaspar Betancourt Cisneros established a horse-drawn railway service called Ferrocarril de Camagüey a Nuevitas in Camagüey (Puerto Príncipe).

Cuba's railway history began on October 12, 1834 when the regent queen of Spain Maria Christina of the Two Sicilies approved the building of the first line. When the Compania de Caminos de Hierro de La Habana opened the 27.5 km line from Havana to Bejucal on November 19, 1837, it was the first steam railway line in Latin America. At this point Spain did not possess any railroad lines. The 27.5 km long line from Havana was extended by an additional 17 km to Güines on 19 November 1839. By December 1843 the cities San Felipe and Batabanó were added to the rail network and further extensions were added in 1847 (17 km), 1848 (21 km), and 1849 (21 km).

Havana had its first streetcar (Ferrocarril Urbano de la Habana) when its service commenced on 3 February 1859.

Pre-Revolutionary Cuba

Boxcar used on Cuban Central Railway to transport sugar cane. ca 1913

American-born Canadian railway builder Sir William Van Horne helped expand Cuba's railway network in the early 20th century. He was an investor in the Cuba Railroad Company (founded 1900).

In 1924 Ferrocarriles Consolidados de Cuba was created from a dispute between Ferrocarriles Consolidados de Cuba and Ferrocarriles de Cuba.

Other railway companies formed and merged in the 1920s:

From 1940 to 1959 Cuba's railway system was modernized by the acquisition of train stock from Budd and Fiat. These trains provided medium speed self-propelled (diesel) four-car trains service on the main line between Havana and Santiago de Cuba. Also after World War II a large network of diesel intercity buses was created with four or five major carriers competing in the east-west corridor between Havana and the provinces to the east. After the revolution with the nationalization of the transportation system, the diversion of resources to defense expenditures and the lack of competition for the service, the train stock slowly deteriorated; this coupled with the inability to obtain replacement parts from the US that had been the main supplier of the equipment for decades destroyed the once efficient system.

A few sugar factories switched over to diesel electric locomotives to haul freight. By 1958, Cuba had more railway trackage per square mile than any other country.

Train ferry

Post-revolutionary Cuba

Diagram of Cuban rail network length in km (1980-2007)

The destruction of President Fulgencio Batista's armoured train by the revolutionaries in the Battle of Santa Clara in December 1958 was an important stepping stone in the Cuban revolution.

After the revolution in 1959, the Ferrocarriles Nacionales de Cuba was created by nationalizing the private and public railway systems. MINAZ continued to operate a separate railway system, mainly to transport sugar products.

From 1963 to 1966, British Rail helped the national railway obtain newer locomotives which were based on the Brush Type 4 locomotives (later Class 47) at the time being built at Brush Traction in Loughborough, but the final assembly of the Cuban locomotives was performed at Clayton Equipment Company Hatton, Derbyshire.[2] After the Cuban Missile Crisis, it became harder for Cuba to buy new railway equipment because of the United States embargo against Cuba. Some trains were delivered via shipment with ships from third countries like the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. For example, the British locomotive shipped from Hull using Yugoslavian ships.

Purchase of new trains and parts to Cuba with the Western Bloc, stopped from the late 1960s, was replaced through trade with the Eastern Bloc. This trade link collapsed with the fall of the Soviet Union.

Cuba was able to obtain used trains and new locomotives, from friendly nations not affected by the embargo:

Starting in 2000, the Cuban railway network was improved by more second hand equipment. More used vehicles were coming from Canada, Mexico and Europe. In 2002 used light rubbing cars (BR771) were acquired from Germany.

Much of Cuba's trains are diesel and only a handful of steam locomotives remain for the sugar industry and the tourism industries.

After the 1990s, China became the new supplier of railway cars for Cuba. In 2006, 12 new locomotives (Type DF7G-C at 2,500 hp or 1,900 kW) were shipped to Cuba. China Railways also sold some of its retired cars.

Recent developments

On September 25, 2007, investors from the Venezuelan Bank for Socio-Economic Development (BANDES) reached an agreement with transportation officials in Cuba to invest US$100 million for infrastructure improvements and repairs to Cuba's rail network. The work is expected to help increase the average speed of trains on Cuba's railways from 40 km/h (25 mph) to 100 km/h (62 mph). As part of the agreement, Cuban engineers will also work on similar projects on Venezuela's rail network.[3]

In October 2007, the Cuban railways ordered two hundred passenger cars and 550 freight wagons from Iranian manufacturer Wagon Pars.[4]

In May 2010, the Cuban government announced wide-ranging plans to repair the railway network, buy new rolling stock, and open four centres to train railway workers.[5]

Rolling stock

Model Manufacturer Numbers Notes Image
TE114K Diesel locomotive [ru] Voroshilovgrad Locomotive Factory, USSR 108
TEM2TK Diesel locomotive [ru] Bryansk Engineering Works [ru], USSR 79
DVM-9 diesel electric locomotive GanzMÁVAG, Hungary 70
MX624 Diesel locomotive MLW, Canada 50 imported in 1976 [6]
G8 Diesel locomotive General Motors Electro-Motive Division, USA 51
TEM4 Diesel locomotive Bryansk Engineering Works [ru], USSR 40
040-DE diesel electric locomotive Brissonneau et Lotz, France 42 Similar to French BB 63000 [fr]
TEM15 Diesel locomotive Voroshilovgrad Locomotive Factory, USSR 25
M62K Diesel locomotive Voroshilovgrad Locomotive Factory, USSR 20
C30-7 Diesel locomotive GE Transportation Systems, USA 19 Acquired via Mexico
BR 771 railbuses [de] VEB Waggonbau Bautzen, GDR 17 all sold after 2000 [7]
BR 971 railbuses [de] VEB Waggonbau Bautzen, GDR 3
BR 772 railbuses [de] VEB Waggonbau Bautzen, GDR 15
BR 972 railbuses [de] VEB Waggonbau Bautzen, GDR 22
DF7G-C diesel electric locomotive CNR Beijing February 7 Locomotive Works,[8] China 47/112 again supplied 2005/2006/20082009–2010
DF7K-C diesel electric locomotive CNR, China 5 First 5 arrived in 2008
GMD1 Diesel locomotive General Motors Electro-Motive Division, Canada 20 From Canadian National Railway to Cuba in 1999
Passenger coaches Hawker Siddeley Canada, Canada assorted From Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México
TEE Mistral 69 From SNCF

Freight cars were mainly acquired from former Eastern Bloc countries and the then USSR, whereas passenger cars from other countries friendly to Cuba (Spain, Japan, Canada and France).[9][10]

See also

References

Further reading

External links

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