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[1] Bullock, R., Off Track: Sub-Saharan African Railways. Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic Background Paper 17, The World Bank: Washington, 2009.
[2] Due, J. F., The problems of rail transport in tropical Africa. The Journal of Developing Areas, 13(4), pp. 375–393, 1979.
[3] Konadu-Agyemang, K. & Asante, C., Reinventing Africa’s socio-economic develop-ment through international tourism trade: the case of Ghana. African Geographical Review, 23(1), pp. 23–47, 2004. [Crossref]
[4] Railway Safety Regulator; About Us, Available at http://rsr.org.za/home/AboutUs. Accessed on: 13 Apr. 2017.
[5] Office of Rail and Road; About ORR, Available at http://orr.gov.uk/about-orr. Accessed on: 29 Apr. 2017.
[6] Office of Rail and Road; Statistic, Available at http://orr.gov.uk/statistics. Accessed on: 29 Apr. 2017.
[7] Gower, T. L., Passenger and Freight Rail Performance 2015-16 Q3 Statistical Release, Office of Rail and Road: London, 2016.
[8] Office of Rail and Road, Passenger and freight rail performance: quality and methodol-ogy report, Office of Rail and Road: London, 2015.
[9] Network Rail, Annual Return, 2010. Available at http://www.networkrail.co.uk/epdf/docs/annual-return-2010/page_156.pdf. Accessed on 18 April, 2016.
[10] EUROSTAT, Statistics Explained: Railway safety statistics, 2016. Available at http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Railway_safety_statistics. Accessed on 23 February, 2016.
[11] Network Rail, Passenger Safety, 2017. Available at http://www.networkrail.co.uk/aspx/11937.aspx. Accessed on 15 March, 2017.
[12] Rail Safety and Standards Board, Precursor Indicator Model for train accident risk, 2017. Available at https://www.rssb.co.uk/risk-analysis-and-safety-reporting/risk-analysis/precursor-indicator-model. Accessed on 18 March, 2017.
[13] Kyriakidis, M., Hirsch, R. & Majumdar, A. Metro railway safety: An analysis of ac-cident precursors. Safety science, 50(7), pp. 1535–1548, 2012.
[14] Kyriakidis et al., Improving railway safety: Global metro railways’ precursor and safe-ty maturity performance. Presentation at International Rail Safety Conference, Hong Kong, 2010.
[15] Muttram, R., Railway safety’s safety risk model. Proceedings of the Institution of Me-chanical Engineers, Part F: Journal of Rail and Rapid Transit, 216(2), pp. 71–79, 2002. [Crossref]
[16] European Railway Agency, Rail Safety Performance in the European Union, Valenci-ennes: France, 2014.
[17] Brown, J., International benchmarking of rail safety indicators. NZ Transport Agency research report, 583, p. 87, 2016.
[18] Railway Safety and Standards Board, Annual Safety Performance Report 2013/14: A reference guide to safety trends on GB railways, RSSB: London, 2014.
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Acadlore takes over the publication of IJTDI from 2025 Vol. 9, No. 4. The preceding volumes were published under a CC BY 4.0 license by the previous owner, and displayed here as agreed between Acadlore and the previous owner. ✯ : This issue/volume is not published by Acadlore.

Open Access
Research article

Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance

Wendy D. Wemakor,
Anson Jack,
Felix Schmid
Birmingham Centre for Railway Research and Education, University of Birmingham, UK
International Journal of Transport Development and Integration
|
Volume 2, Issue 1, 2018
|
Pages 98-114
Received: N/A,
Revised: N/A,
Accepted: N/A,
Available online: 12-31-2017
View Full Article|Download PDF

Abstract:

Deregulation and/or privatization of railway systems has been adapted in many developed countries, aimed at improving economic performance. literature on railway performance mainly focuses on the effects of reforms and on liberalization itself as well as measuring performance indicators for the management of assets in the railway industry. although these management reforms on the maintenance and operations of rail infrastructures are generally found to have contributed to improving trends of rail safety and safety performance, there is not much evidence from research to support this. There is also little work on how the lessons from restructuring can apply in developing countries. Identifying approaches that can revitalize railways in developing and emerging economies while raising standards of safety and operational performance is the objective of this article. Presented are some of the specific lessons from developed countries and how they can be applied in developing economies’ railways, noting that it is not generally feasible to adopt best practices because of social and/or economic constraints. Only where there is a significant foreign investor is there the potential to replicate best in class technology and operational practices, so the presentation will identify areas where less well-funded railways can adopt lessons from developed countries – using both historical and current international benchmarks. The originality of this approach lies in establishing the relationship between performance and safety in the era of reforms and liberalization of the rail industry. The article analyses publicly available data to suggest how rail safety considerations have impacted in a more general way upon railway performance, and by extension, derive lessons for emerging and developing economies.

Keywords: Benchmarking, Operational Performance, Railway, Safety, Safety Performance

References
[1] Bullock, R., Off Track: Sub-Saharan African Railways. Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic Background Paper 17, The World Bank: Washington, 2009.
[2] Due, J. F., The problems of rail transport in tropical Africa. The Journal of Developing Areas, 13(4), pp. 375–393, 1979.
[3] Konadu-Agyemang, K. & Asante, C., Reinventing Africa’s socio-economic develop-ment through international tourism trade: the case of Ghana. African Geographical Review, 23(1), pp. 23–47, 2004. [Crossref]
[4] Railway Safety Regulator; About Us, Available at http://rsr.org.za/home/AboutUs. Accessed on: 13 Apr. 2017.
[5] Office of Rail and Road; About ORR, Available at http://orr.gov.uk/about-orr. Accessed on: 29 Apr. 2017.
[6] Office of Rail and Road; Statistic, Available at http://orr.gov.uk/statistics. Accessed on: 29 Apr. 2017.
[7] Gower, T. L., Passenger and Freight Rail Performance 2015-16 Q3 Statistical Release, Office of Rail and Road: London, 2016.
[8] Office of Rail and Road, Passenger and freight rail performance: quality and methodol-ogy report, Office of Rail and Road: London, 2015.
[9] Network Rail, Annual Return, 2010. Available at http://www.networkrail.co.uk/epdf/docs/annual-return-2010/page_156.pdf. Accessed on 18 April, 2016.
[10] EUROSTAT, Statistics Explained: Railway safety statistics, 2016. Available at http://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Railway_safety_statistics. Accessed on 23 February, 2016.
[11] Network Rail, Passenger Safety, 2017. Available at http://www.networkrail.co.uk/aspx/11937.aspx. Accessed on 15 March, 2017.
[12] Rail Safety and Standards Board, Precursor Indicator Model for train accident risk, 2017. Available at https://www.rssb.co.uk/risk-analysis-and-safety-reporting/risk-analysis/precursor-indicator-model. Accessed on 18 March, 2017.
[13] Kyriakidis, M., Hirsch, R. & Majumdar, A. Metro railway safety: An analysis of ac-cident precursors. Safety science, 50(7), pp. 1535–1548, 2012.
[14] Kyriakidis et al., Improving railway safety: Global metro railways’ precursor and safe-ty maturity performance. Presentation at International Rail Safety Conference, Hong Kong, 2010.
[15] Muttram, R., Railway safety’s safety risk model. Proceedings of the Institution of Me-chanical Engineers, Part F: Journal of Rail and Rapid Transit, 216(2), pp. 71–79, 2002. [Crossref]
[16] European Railway Agency, Rail Safety Performance in the European Union, Valenci-ennes: France, 2014.
[17] Brown, J., International benchmarking of rail safety indicators. NZ Transport Agency research report, 583, p. 87, 2016.
[18] Railway Safety and Standards Board, Annual Safety Performance Report 2013/14: A reference guide to safety trends on GB railways, RSSB: London, 2014.

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Wemakor, W. D., Jack, A., & Schmid, F. (2018). Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance. Int. J. Transp. Dev. Integr., 2(1), 98-114. https://doi.org/10.2495/TDI-V2-N1-98-114
W. D. Wemakor, A. Jack, and F. Schmid, "Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance," Int. J. Transp. Dev. Integr., vol. 2, no. 1, pp. 98-114, 2018. https://doi.org/10.2495/TDI-V2-N1-98-114
@research-article{Wemakor2018EstablishingTR,
title={Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance},
author={Wendy D. Wemakor and Anson Jack and Felix Schmid},
journal={International Journal of Transport Development and Integration},
year={2018},
page={98-114},
doi={https://doi.org/10.2495/TDI-V2-N1-98-114}
}
Wendy D. Wemakor, et al. "Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance." International Journal of Transport Development and Integration, v 2, pp 98-114. doi: https://doi.org/10.2495/TDI-V2-N1-98-114
Wendy D. Wemakor, Anson Jack and Felix Schmid. "Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance." International Journal of Transport Development and Integration, 2, (2018): 98-114. doi: https://doi.org/10.2495/TDI-V2-N1-98-114
WEMAKOR W D, JACK A, SCHMID F. Establishing the Relationship Between Railway Safety and Operational Performance[J]. International Journal of Transport Development and Integration, 2018, 2(1): 98-114. https://doi.org/10.2495/TDI-V2-N1-98-114