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Criticism of Cost-Cutting Plan for the Leipzig-Chemnitz Rail Line

Criticism of Cost-Cutting Plan for the Leipzig-Chemnitz Rail Line
The Chemnitz-Leipzig rail line lacks not only a second track but also an overhead wire. That is why battery-powered trains are currently operating there. (File photo) / Photo: Hendrik Schmidt/dpa
From: DieSachsen News
Due to a cost overrun, there are plans to scale back the double-track expansion of the Chemnitz-Leipzig rail line. This is causing discontent.

The planned cutbacks to the expansion of the Chemnitz-Leipzig rail line are drawing criticism from many quarters. “Despite full electrification, the expansion plans fall far short of the expectations originally promised and the region’s actual needs,” explains Sebastian Drechsler, spokesperson for the Chemnitz Rail Initiative. Under the cost-cutting plan, half-hourly service between the two cities would only be possible in the early morning and late afternoon. Drechsler states that this clearly fails to meet passengers’ actual needs. 

According to Deutsche Bahn and the Ministry of Infrastructure, the project’s costs have spiraled out of control. Based on the latest projections, a complete double-track expansion plus electrification for the northern section between Leipzig and Geithain alone would cost more than 1.3 billion euros. A new feasibility study therefore proposes making only about 24 of the 44 kilometers double-tracked in that section. Electrification will still proceed.

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Association: Chemnitz Cut Off from Long-Distance Rail Service for Decades

However, the passenger association Pro Bahn believes that this cost-cutting plan jeopardizes the goal of connecting Chemnitz directly to long-distance rail service. “With the proposed, scaled-back expansion plans, Chemnitz is being deliberately cut off from long-distance rail service for decades, and yet another promise is being broken,” said Markus Haubold, chairman of Pro Bahn Central Germany. A few isolated trains have nothing to do with an attractive long-distance rail network. The new study calls for three long-distance trains per day on the route in the future.

The Saxony Industrial Association 1828 also criticizes the decision to shelve the plan for a continuous double-track expansion of this important line. They argue that this will leave the line vulnerable to disruptions.

Opposition calls it a “declaration of bankruptcy”

Criticism is also coming from the opposition in the state parliament. The Greens are demanding that Minister President Michael Kretschmer (CDU) make the expansion of this vital transportation artery a top priority. The new cost-cutting plan is a “declaration of bankruptcy in transportation policy,” according to State Representative Katja Meier. Chemnitz needs a real long-distance rail future instead of “pretend long-distance rail service” with three trains a day. “If the federal government is serious about structural change, it must not leave Saxony to bear the increased costs alone.” 

The fact that Transportation Minister Regina Kraushaar (CDU) was unable to push through the complete double-track expansion of the overloaded rail line is an admission of failure by the entire Kretschmer government, according to AfD transportation policy expert Tobias Keller. “The industrial region of southwestern Saxony has been completely left behind in terms of transportation.”

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