Cepu Forest Railway


The Cepu Forest Railway is a narrow gauge light logging railway that runs through teak plantations to the northwest of the town of Cepu on the boundary between Central and East Java provinces, on the island of Java in Indonesia. It is owned by Perhutani, a state-owned forestry company of Indonesia. Steam traction is still dominant.
Along with Olean Sugar Mill in Situbondo, East Java, Tasik Madu sugar mill and the rack railway at Ambarawa, the Cepu Forest Railway is one of the four main centres of steam railway heritage remaining in Java. In fact, with four operable steam locomotives, built by Berliner Maschinenbau and, the Cepu depot has the largest concentration of active preserved steam locomotives in Indonesia. It is therefore of major heritage importance and due to its globally significant status as an active and complete steam locomotive-powered logging railway it might also be considered a candidate World Heritage Site.
steam locomotives on the Cepu Forest Railway in Central Java, Indonesia
The railway was originally constructed circa 1915 and was fully operational until the late 1990s, with over of track in the Perhutani forests. Since 1998 much of the track has been lifted, but occasional logging trains continued to operate until 2002.
Since 2002 only chartered logging trains and a tourist train have been run. The railway is popular with foreign tourists, especially from Europe, the United States and Japan. The main remaining line is of a distance of around to an arboretum where there are spectacular 150-year-old teak trees along with a visitor centre where tourist train passengers are often entertained by local cultural shows.
In 2006 a bridge just outside Cepu was damaged by flooding. In late 2007 this was repaired, and tourist trains were restored to the arboretum in December 2007. Since then there have been numerous tours and chartered logging trains. There were also reportedly 'real' logging trains run early in 2010 when otherwise inaccessible trees brought down by storm damage were removed using steam trains.
Tours and charter trains are marketed and run by PT Palawi, a subsidiary of Perhutani, in Jakarta.