Rail transport in Turkey
Turkey has a well-developed, state-owned railway system built to standard gauge which falls under the remit of the Ministry of Transportation and Infrastructure. The primary rail carrier is the Türkiye Cumhuriyeti Devlet Demiryolları which is responsible for all long-distance and cross-border freight and passenger trains. A number of other companies operate suburban passenger trains in urban conurbations.
Native railway industry extends to the production of locomotives, passenger vehicles and freight wagons; some vehicles are also produced through licensing agreements and cooperation with foreign countries.
In the early 21st century, major infrastructural projects were realized; such as the construction of a high-speed railway network as well as a tunnel under the Bosphorus strait which connects Europe and Anatolia by rail for the first time.
Turkey is a member of the International Union of Railways. The UIC Country Code for Turkey is 75.
History
Construction of the first railway line in Turkey began in 1856, being constructed by a British company that had gained permission from the Ottoman Empire. Later, French and German companies also constructed lines - the motivation was not only economic, the region had a strategically important position as a trade route between Europe and Asia.As with other countries, rapid expansion followed; by 1922 over 8000 km of lines had been constructed in the Ottoman Empire. At the birth of the Republic of Turkey in 1923, there were 3,660 km of standard gauge lines, of which 1,378 km were state-owned; while the lines owned by foreign investors were eventually nationalized starting from 1927. The railways were considered an essential part of the state by the government of the Republic, and continued to expand with new railway projects - over 3000 km of new tracks were built in Turkey between 1923 and 1940. Railways were constructed serving mines, agriculture, people and ports; at the same time more lines serving eastern Anatolia were built, in their part helping to tie Turkey together as a functioning state.
In the years following World War II, the emphasis in transportation shifted to asphalt road and highway construction; it was not until the end of the 20th century that railways returned to favour with major passenger infrastructure projects being initiated, and five thousand kilometres of new lines planned for construction.
Future restructuring and plans
The Turkish State Railways may be split with the passenger and freight operations being part of a new company named DETAŞ with TCDD left as a track and infrastructure operator. This restructuring will also allow other rail operators to run trains on TCDD tracks by means of track access charges, and will end the monopoly of TCDD.The new law about liberalization of Turkish railway transportation is accepted by Turkish Parliament and approved by the President of Turkey in April 2013. According to the law, TCDD will stay as the owner of infrastructure and the new company TCDD Taşımacılık AŞ will be operating the trains. Private companies will soon be allowed to run on TCDD infrastructure as well as the new infrastructure owned by private companies if
constructed.
Turkish Ministry of Transportation has a plan of constructing 4000 km conventional and 10000 km high speed lines till 2023. There are also some commuter rail projects like Marmaray and Başkentray.
Network
In 2008, Turkey had 10,991 km of railway lines, of which 95% were single-tracked, 21% of the network was electrified and 28% signalled. Due to the mountainous geography of the country, the network has many steep gradients and sharp curves.As of June 2016, there is 8334 km of conventional railway line and 593 km of high-speed railway line. 2288 km of the network is electrified, and 3036 km of it is signaled. Turkish Ministry of Transportation has a plan of constructing 2000 km conventional and 5000 km high speed lines till 2023.
Electrified lines run from Kapıkule on the Bulgarian border via Istanbul to Ankara, and from Divriği via Malatya to İskenderun on the Mediterranean coast. Additionally, Sivas and İzmir have electrified networks.
Here are some technical informations about the Turkish railway system:
- Rail Gauge -
- Electrification - 25 kV, 50 Hz AC Overhead lines
- Loading Gauge - UIC GC
- Traffic - Right-Hand traffic
- Pantograph - 1950 mm and 1600 mm
- Rail - S49 and UIC 60
- Sleepers - Wooden & Steel and Concrete
- Fastening - Baseplate based with Screw spikes and Tension Clamp
- Platform height - 380 mm, 550 mm and 1050 mm
- Coupling - Buffers and Chains and Scharfenberg
- Brake - Air
- Curve minimum - and
High-speed rail lines
As of May 2016, there are four high-speed routes running on two different high-speed railway lines. Bursa, Sivas and Izmir are among some of other cities to be connected to the high-speed network with works being underway. Bursa will be connected to the Ankara-Istanbul high-speed railway, a new line is currently being constructed from Ankara to Sivas and another new line from Polatlı to İzmir via Afyon is also under construction.
Lines are also planned from Yerköy to Kayseri and another one from Halkalı to Edirne on Turkey's European border with Bulgaria.
Passenger transport
In addition to high speed lines, there are several regular trains for passenger transportation. Almost all the network is covered by these passenger trains, which are mostly departing every day. In addition to high speed trains, there are several types of wagons being used for railway transport like pulman, sleeping cars, couchette, dmu and emu sets. In 2011 more than 26 million passengers used trains for domestic transportation. Due to cancellation of many trains because of renewals of rail network, ridership decrease to less than 20 million in 2012. As of 2013, the ridership reached to 20.9 million.As of May 2016, there are several construction points in Turkish rail network which is causing complete or partial closures.
Railway links with adjacent countries
West neighboring countries
- Bulgaria – open – – 25 kV, 50 Hz AC
- Greece – open – – 25 kV, 50 Hz AC
East neighboring countries
- Georgia – open – break-of-gauge / at Akhalkalaki
- Armenia – closed – break-of-gauge /
- Azerbaijan – no direct link – break-of-gauge / via Georgia, via Iran.
- Iran – via Lake Van train ferry –
South neighboring countries
- Iraq – no direct link, traffic routed via Syria –
- Syria – closed because of the Syrian Civil War –
The Iranian rail network is connected to the Turkish rail network via the Lake Van train ferry close to the border - which creates a serious bottleneck. In 2007 an agreement was made to create a rail link between the two countries.
A new connection to the Caucasus region and Central Asia via Georgia and Azerbaijan is planned ; the line will involve a break of gauge from to. The construction of the line is planned to be completed by 2014 and has a target of transporting 17 million tons of cargo per year. This railway by-passes the Kars–Gyumri–Tbilisi railway line that connected Turkey to Armenia which was closed in 1993 during the Nagorno-Karabakh War; in 2009 the possibility of re-opening the line was stated by the Armenian transport minister.
Urban rail
Commuter
The biggest three cities of Turkey have suburban rail system, listed as follows:City | System | Operator | Electrification | Conductor system | Gauge | Bidirectional traffic |
İstanbul | Marmaray | TCDD Taşımacılık A.Ş. | 25 kV, 50 Hz AC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | |
Ankara | Başkentray | TCDD Taşımacılık A.Ş. | 25 kV, 50 Hz AC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | |
İzmir | Egeray | İZBAN A.Ş. | 25 kV, 50 Hz AC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic |
Metro/LRT
The biggest five cities of Turkey have Metro/LRT system, listed as follows:City | System | Electrification | Conductor system | Gauge | Bidirectional traffic | Opened |
İstanbul | İstanbul Metro | 750 V DC & 1,500 V DC | Third rail & Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 3 September 1989 | |
Ankara | Ankara Metro | 750 V DC | Third rail | Right-hand traffic | 20 August 1996 | |
İzmir | İzmir Metro | 750 V DC | Third rail | Right-hand traffic | 22 April 2000 | |
Bursa | Bursaray | 1,500 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 24 April 2002 | |
Adana | Adana Metro | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 14 May 2010 | |
Konya | Konya Metro | 750 V DC ?? | Overhead line ?? | Right-hand traffic | planned 03-July 2020 |
Tram
There are also several tram systems in many cities, listed as follows:City | System | Electrification | Conductor system | Gauge | Bidirectional traffic | Opened |
İstanbul | Istanbul Tram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 13 June 1992 | |
İzmir | İzmir Tram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | Under construction | |
Bursa | Burtram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 13 October 2013 | |
Antalya | Antalya Tram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 27 March 1999 | |
Konya | Konya Tram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 28 September 1992 | |
Gaziantep | Gaziantep Tram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | ? | |
Kayseri | Kayseray | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 2009 | |
Samsun | Samsun Tram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 10 October 2010 | |
Eskişehir | Estram | 750 V DC | Overhead line | Right-hand traffic | 24 December 2004 |
Nostalgic tramway
City | System | Electrification | Conductor system | Gauge | Bidirectional traffic |
İstanbul | İstanbul Tram | 600 V DC | Overhead line | Partially | |
Bursa | Burtram | ? | Overhead line | No | |
Antalya | ? | ? | Overhead line | No? |
Companies
Turkish State Railways
In combination with its affiliates, the State Railways of the Republic of Turkey have a monopoly on passenger and freight rail transportation, as well as the manufacturing of rolling stock and tracks. The organization was created in 1927 to operate the former railway lines of the Ottoman Empire that were left within the borders of the Republic of Turkey whose boundaries were defined with the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923. Additionally, major ports are also operated by the company.Affiliated companies
Three affiliated companies of the TCDD produce rolling stock for the Turkish railway system:- TÜLOMSAŞ produces diesel and electric locomotives and related components; the company has produced locomotives under license from numerous companies over the years, including Krauss-Maffei, GM-EMD, Toshiba and Alstom.
- TÜVASAŞ manufactures coaching stock as well as diesel hydraulic railcars, and has a technology transfer agreement with Rotem of Korea to manufacture DMUs as well as a joint venture with Rotem, EUROTEM, to outfit and test high-speed train sets and suburban trains.
- TÜDEMSAŞ produces and repairs freight wagons.
Statistical information
The most common rail weight is ~49 kg/m with 69% of track, the remainder being of lighter weight rail, except for 150 km of 60 kg/m rail. Similarly, 69% of sleepers are of the concrete type, with the remainder being wood and steel. Over 700 tunnels exist, with a total length of 181 km; the majority are under 1 km long and only one of them has a length of over 4 km. 1,316 steel bridges and over 10,000 concrete bridges exist, the majority are suitable for axle loads over 20 t, with 40% allowing axle loads of 22.5 tonnes.
In 2008, there were 64 electric locomotives and 549 diesel locomotives in Turkey, with availabilities of 81 and 84 percent, respectively. Additionally, 50 steam locomotives exist, of which 2 are kept in active order. In addition to the 83 EMUs and 44 DMUs for passenger transport, there were 995 coaches in Turkey Over 17,000 wagons of various types make up the rest of the fleet.