Abstract

Purpose The operation safety of the high-speed railway has been widely concerned. Due to the joint influence of the environment, equipment, personnel and other factors, accidents are inevitable in the operation process. However, few studies focused on identifying contributing factors affecting the severity of high-speed railway accidents because of the difficulty in obtaining field data. This study aims to investigate the impact factors affecting the severity of the general high-speed railway. Design/methodology/approach A total of 14 potential factors were examined from 475 data. The severity level is categorized into four levels by delay time and the number of subsequent trains that are affected by the accident. The partial proportional odds model was constructed to relax the constraint of the parallel line assumption. Findings The results show that 10 factors are found to significantly affect accident severity. Moreover, the factors including automation train protection (ATP) system fault, platform screen door and train door fault, traction converter fault and railway clearance intrusion by objects have an effect on reducing the severity level. On the contrary, the accidents caused by objects hanging on the catenary, pantograph fault, passenger misconducting or sudden illness, personnel intrusion of railway clearance, driving on heavy rain or snow and train collision against objects tend to be more severe. Originality/value The research results are very useful for mitigating the consequences of high-speed rail accidents.

Highlights

  • Safety is the primary and critical consideration in the operation of high-speed railway

  • A total of 14 factors including automation train protection (ATP) system fault, turnout indication loss, platform screen door or train door fault, catenary blackout, foreign object hanging on the catenary, pantograph fault, traction converter fault, Carbody’s vibration, locomotive fault, passenger misconducting or sudden illness, personnel intrusion of railway clearance, driving on heavy rain or snow, railway clearance intrusion by a foreign object, train collision against foreign object are taken into consideration

  • Accident severity is classified into I, II, III, IV with severity level more and more severe

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Summary

Introduction

Safety is the primary and critical consideration in the operation of high-speed railway. Accidents are inevitable due to the systematic complexity, the unpredictability of. Smart and Resilient Transport Vol 3 No 1, 2021 pp. © Jing Wang, Yinghan Wang, Yichuan Peng and Jian John Lu. Published in Smart and Resilient Transport. The full terms of this licence maybe seen at http:// creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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