Rail transport in Spain
Rail transport in Spain operates on four rail gauges and services are operated by a variety of private and public operators. The total route length in 2012 was 16,026 km.
Most railways are operated by Renfe Operadora; metre and narrow-gauge lines are operated by FEVE and other carriers in individual autonomous communities. It is proposed and planned to build or convert more lines to standard gauge, including some dual gauging of broad-gauge lines, especially where these lines link to France, including platforms to be heightened.
Spain is a member of the International Union of Railways. The UIC Country Code for Spain is 71.
History
The first railway line in the Iberian Peninsula was built in 1848 between Barcelona and Mataró. In 1851 the Madrid-Aranjuez line was opened. In 1852 the first narrow gauge line was built; in 1863 a line reached the Portuguese border. By 1864 the Madrid-Irun line had been opened, and the French border reached.In 1900 the first line to be electrified was La Poveda-Madrid.
In 1941 RENFE was created.
The last steam locomotive was withdrawn in 1975, in 1986 the maximum speed on the railways was raised to 160 km/h, and in 1992 the Madrid-Seville high-speed line opened, beginning the process of building a nationwide high-speed network known as AVE.
The current plans of the Spanish government are to finish the standard-gauge high-speed network by building new sections of track and upgrading and converting to standard gauge the existing line along the Mediterranean coast connecting the ports of Barcelona, Tarragona, Valencia, Cartagena and Almería, and to link Madrid with Vigo, Santiago and A Coruña in Galicia, and to extend the Madrid-Valladolid line to Burgos and the Basque cities of Bilbao and San Sebastian and Hendaye on the French border, as well as to link Madrid with Lisbon and the port of Sines through Badajoz. Former plans by the Popular Party government under PM Aznar to link all provincial capitals with high-speed rail have been shelved as unrealistic, unaffordable, and contrary to all economic logic as no European funding would be made available for such projects.
Following the opening of the AVE network, the classic Iberian gauge railways have lost importance in inter-city travel, for example, the Madrid–Barcelona railway takes over nine hours to travel between the two cities stopping at every station. With the Madrid–Barcelona high-speed rail line, the longest possible journey is just three hours. This has allowed the conventional lines to increase focus on regional and commuter traffic, along with freight. Some lines, including the Córdoba-Bobadilla section of the classic Córdoba–Málaga railway, have lost passenger traffic completely due to the opening of AVE serving the same destinations.
Many important mainland Spanish towns remain disconnected to the rail network, the largest being Marbella with a population of over 140,000, along with Roquetas de Mar, El Ejido, Chiclana de la Frontera and Torrevieja. Other towns and municipalities are not on the national rail network but linked to light rail or metro systems, such as Santa Coloma de Gramanet, Barcelona ; Getxo, Biscay ; Torrent, Valencia ; and Benidorm, Alicante.
Starting in Franco's regime and continuing into the 1980s, multiple lines of the Spanish rail network were closed. Campaigns for reopening former lines exist, including a reopening the branch to the aforementioned Torrevieja from the Alicante–Murcia main line; the former line from Guadix to Lorca via Baza ; Plasencia to Salamanca and Gandía to Dénia.
Operators
- Renfe Operadora is a state-owned company which operates freight and passenger trains on the "Iberian gauge", standard gauge and rail networks of the Spanish nationalized infrastructure company ADIF. Both were formed from the break-up of the former national carrier RENFE and subsequently of FEVE.
- EuskoTren operates trains on part of the narrow gauge railway network in the Basque Country.
- FGC operates several unconnected lines in Catalonia. It operates of narrow gauge, of standard gauge, and of Iberian gauge routes, two metre gauge rack railways and four funicular railways.
- FGV operates several metre gauge lines in the Valencian Community.
- FS operates an electrified narrow gauge railway on the Spanish island of Majorca between the towns of Palma and Sóller.
- SFM operates the metre gauge railway network on the Spanish island of Majorca.
- Acciona Rail Services, a subsidiary of Acciona, operates a coal cargo line between Asturias and the province of León.
- COMSA Rail Transport, a subsidiary of COMSA, operates a cargo line from the Port of Gijón to Valladolid.
- Continental Rail is dedicated to bringing materials into the gorges of the high-speed lines in progress.
Lines
Conventional Iberian gauge lines
- Alcázar de San Juan–Cádiz railway
- Algeciras-Bobadilla railway
- Barcelona–Cerbère railway
- Casetas–Bilbao railway
- Chinchilla–Cartagena railway
- Córdoba–Málaga railway
- León–A Coruña railway
- Linares Baeza–Almería railway
- Madrid–Barcelona railway
- Madrid–Hendaye railway
- Madrid–Valencia railway
- Valencia−Sant Vicenç de Calders railway
- Venta de Baños–Gijón railway
High-speed standard gauge lines
- Antequera–Granada high-speed rail line
- Madrid–Barcelona high-speed rail line
- Perpignan–Barcelona high-speed rail line
- Madrid–Málaga high-speed rail line
- Madrid–León high-speed rail line
- Madrid–Levante high-speed rail line
- Madrid–Seville high-speed rail line
Narrow gauge lines
Metro/light rail systems
- Alicante
- Barcelona
- Bilbao
- Granada.
- Jaén built in 2011 but without service for political reasons.
- Madrid
- Málaga
- Murcia
- Palma
- Parla
- Santa Cruz de Tenerife
- San Sebastian
- Seville
- Valencia
- Vélez-Málaga opened in 2006, closed 2012
- Vitoria-Gasteiz
- Zaragoza
Rail links with adjacent countries
- France – break-of-gauge /
- Portugal – same gauge
- Gibraltar – no current rail system in Gibraltar, although accessible via buses from La Línea to San Roque station.
- Morocco – no access to mainland
- * Closest station to Melilla - Beni Ansar
- * Closest station to Ceuta - Tangier-Med station
- * Closest station to Andorra Andorre-L'Hospitalet station
Subsidies