The Indian Railways recently conducted a test run of the 3.5-km-long freight train, Super Vasuki, with 295 loaded wagons carrying over 27,000 tonnes of coal between Korba in Chhattisgarh and Rajnandgao in Nagpur, making it the India's longest and heaviest train. The video of the train passing through the Kothari Road station was shared by Railways Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw on his Twitter handle. In comparison, Australia's BHP Iron Ore has a length of 7.352 km, making it the longest freight train in the world (also the longest train overall). 


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The train run by the South East Central Railway left Korba at 13:50 on August 15 and took 11.20 hours to cover the distance of 267 km. This is the longest and heaviest freight train ever run by the Railways, the national transporter said, adding the train takes about four minutes to cross a station.



Super Vasuki capacity


The amount of coal carried by Super Vasuki is enough to fire 3000 MW of power plant for one full day, officials said. This is three times the capacity of existing railway rakes (90 cars with 100 tonnes in each) which carries about 9,000 tonnes of coal in one journey.


The train was formed by amalgamating five rakes of goods trains as one unit. The Railways plans to use this arrangement (longer freight trains) more frequently, especially to transport coal in peak demand season to prevent fuel shortages of power stations, the officials said.


Earlier this year, coal shortages had pushed the country into a severe power crisis.


With PTI inputs