Siemens Mobility


Siemens Mobility, also known as Siemens Transportation Systems is a separately-managed company of Siemens, arising from a corporate restructuring effective 1 August 2018. With its global headquarters in Munich, Siemens Mobility has four core business units: Mobility Management, dedicated to rail technology and intelligent traffic systems, Railway Electrification, Rolling Stock, and Customer Services.

History

Innovations, such as the world's first electric train in 1879, when Siemens & Halske unveiled a train in which power was supplied through the rails, and the world's first electric tram in 1881, with the implementation of 2.5-kilometer-long electric tramway located in Berlin, built at the company's own expense, cemented the use of electric power in transportation systems.
In the following years, inventions such as the first electric trolleybus, mine locomotives, and the first underground railway in continental Europe, set the path from trams and subways to today's high-speed trains.
Siemens, alongside ThyssenKrupp and Transrapid International, was as part of the German consortium that built the Shanghai Maglev, inaugurated in 2002 by the German chancellor, Gerhard Schröder, and the Chinese premier, Zhu Rongji. It was the world's first commercial high-speed magnetic levitation train, which holds the title of the fastest commercial service, travelling up to 430 km/h.
On November 2012, Siemens acquired Invensys Rail for 1.7 billion pounds sterling.
On July 2017, Siemens confirmed it had taken over Hannover-based software company HaCon, to be managed as a separate legal entity. The financial details were not disclosed.
On September 2017, Siemens announced a proposal to merge its transportation division with Alstom, with the objective of creating "a new European champion in the rail industry". The combined rail business, was to be named Siemens Alstom and headquartered in Paris, would have had $18 billion U.S. in revenue and employed 62,300 people in more than 60 countries. Seen as a measure to counter the rise of China's CRRC with support from both the French and German governments. In February 2019, the European Commission refused permission for the merger to proceed.
During Innotrans in September 2018, Siemens Mobility unveiled the world first driverless tram in Berlin, the result of a joint research and development project with ViP Verkehrsbetriebe Potsdam, on a six-kilometre section of the tram network in Potsdam, Germany. At the same time, the Data Capture Unit was introduced. It is the world's first EBA-certified unidirectional gateway safety assessment, that enables 100% secure connectivity of new and existing safety critical systems, up to Safety integrity level 4, to provide data analytics and other cloud hosted digital services.

Key Locations

CityCountryImageBusiness UnitProductsRefs
BraunschweigGermanyMobility ManagementCenelec Rail Technology & IT / OT Security
BerlinGermanyMobility Management
Sacramento, CaliforniaUnited StatesRolling StockLocomotives: Sprinter and Charger
Light rail vehicles
KrefeldGermanyRolling StockLocomotives: Velaro
Trams: Avenio and Combino
Louisville, KentuckyUnited StatesMobility ManagementAREMA Rail Technology
PooleUnited KingdomMobility ManagementRail Technology & Communication equipment
MadridSpainMobility ManagementRail Technology
MelbourneAustraliaMobility Management
ErlangenGermanyRail Electrification
Customer Services
Digital Services, Electrification AC & DC components
New YorkUnited StatesMobility Management
Customer Services
Rail technology
Digital Services

Products

Digital Services
Locomotives
EMU and DMU
Passenger coaches
Light Rail/Trams
People Mover
Metro/Subway
MAGLEV TRAINS