Safety - our number one priority

Safety is one of Hupac’s major priorities. The company aims at carrying out a safe and reliable transportation system, ensuring maximum safety in all its fields of activity.

 

Safety objectives

Our main safety objectives relate to the prevention of accidents in terminals and on the railway lines, the integrity of load units and smooth operation of the wagon fleet.

 

Compliance with legislation

Hupac conforms to the statutory safety provisions; if necessary, the company voluntarily implements additional measures.

 

Active management

Hupac makes available the instruments, resources and processes needed to guarantee an adequate system for safety management.

 

Focus on prevention

Hupac supports every initiative aimed at preventing safety-relevant disruptions or accidents.

 

Adequate training

Hupac's employees are adequately trained allowing them to perform their functions conscientiously and responsibly.

 

Dangerous goods

Hupac has put in place a centralised service specifically dedicated to this kind of transport, headed by a Dangerous Goods compliance advisor, appointed and trained according to the provisions of Directive 96/35/CE. 

 

Monitoring and improvement

Hupac regularly verifies the safety level in the company to identify any shortcomings and intervening in critical situations. Monitoring and controlling provide the basis for the continuous improvement process.

 

Teamwork

Safety is the result of teamwork involving collaborators, partners, customers and supervisory authorities. Hupac promotes an open, constructive dialog and supports awareness and motivation of all individuals, with the objective of creating an effective safety culture.

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Securing capacity for freight traffic; protecting modal shift

Switzerland's freight transport industry welcomes the solutions that have been worked out for rail freight transport following the devastating accident in the Gotthard Base Tunnel. The task now is to make optimal use of the replacement capacities and to successively expand them in order to secure supplies and protect the modal shift.

21.08.2023 - Due to the accident in the Gotthard base tunnel on 10 August, a backlog of trains and loading units has built up along the Rhine-Alpine corridor despite the low demand resulting from the holidays. Switzerland does have diversion options via the Gotthard mountain route and the Lötschberg/Simplon route. But these cannot accommodate the full volume of the route via the Gotthard base tunnel because of profile and capacity restrictions.

 

The opening of the undamaged tube in the Gotthard Base Tunnel, announced for 23 August, will provide relief for Switzerland's supply and transit traffic. SBB Infrastructure will provide 90 train paths per day for freight trains with a 4-metre profile. Together with 20 diversionary train paths via the Gotthard mountain route for conventional wagonload traffic and a residual capacity via Lötschberg-Simplon, a considerable part of the necessary train path capacity for transalpine freight traffic through Switzerland is created in planning terms.

 

In order to use or expand this capacity as effectively as possible, the freight transport industry recommends the following criteria and measures:

  1. Utilisation of the undamaged east tunnel of the Gotthard Base Tunnel exclusively for freight traffic and with priority for trains with a 4-metre profile.
  2. Successively maximise the capacity of the Gotthard base tunnel by increasing speeds and using all available track sections throughout the tunnel.
  3. Use of the mountain route for passenger traffic and for conventional wagonload trains which do not require a 4-metre profile and which, because of their low weight, are not dependent on costly multiple traction.
  4. Utilisation of the available capacity on the Lötschberg line and its access routes in the south by means of appropriate measures.
  5. Active operational management using all available parking and buffer capacities.
  6. Close coordination by SBB Infrastructure with the neighbouring infrastructure managers in the south and in the north in the sense of a crisis management, in order to adapt timetables and to avoid or overcome inefficiencies caused by construction sites and other irregularities on the diversion and access routes, as quickly as possible.

One thing is clear: until the second tube is in operation, the single-tube capacity of the Gotthard must be reserved exclusively for freight traffic. This is because the Gotthard base tunnel, together with the Ceneri base tunnel and the continuous 4-metre corridor from border to border, fulfils an essential prerequisite for the exchange of goods on the north-south axis and for the legally binding modal shift policy. While passenger traffic can benefit from a solid and reliable transport offer via the mountain route, freight traffic is threatened with a major shift back to the roads, with massive congestion on the A2 between Basel and Chiasso, if sufficient capacity is not available over a longer period of time.

 

Preventing this is the central concern of all rail freight operators. They are committed to making the best possible use of the available capacity by acting flexibly and cooperating pragmatically, with the aim of guaranteeing logistics a reliable, marketable rail transport service even in this difficult situation.

 

Contacts

ASTAG            André Kirchhofer, a.kirchhofer@astag.ch

BLS Cargo      Michael Rüfer, michael.ruefer@bls.ch

DB Cargo        Martin Brunner, martin.brunner@deutschebahn.com

Hupac             Irmtraut Tonndorf, itonndorf@hupac.com

Railcare           Philip Wegmüller, philipp.wegmueller@railcare.ch

VAP                 Frank Furrer, furrer@cargorail.ch

Hupac Group
Viale R. Manzoni 6
CH-6830 Chiasso

Tel. +41 58 8558800

 

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