East Coast Railway records highest-ever scrap disposal revenue in 2025-26 fiscal
East Coast Railway has achieved a significant milestone in scrap disposal during the financial year 2025–26, recording its highest-ever revenue of Rs 290.22 crore.
Indian Railways has approved the provision of the indigenous Kavach automatic train protection system on 631 Route Kilometres (RKm) of East Coast Railway at a cost of Rs 270 crore.
Photo: SNS
Indian Railways has approved the provision of the indigenous Kavach automatic train protection system on 631 Route Kilometres (RKm) of East Coast Railway at a cost of Rs 270 crore.
The project covers six important railway sections of East Coast Railway, namely Baghuapal–Budhapank, Haridaspur–Paradeep, Khurda Road (KUR)-Balangir, Naupada-Gunupur, Lanjigarh Road-Junagarh and Bobbili-Salur.
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The sanctioned work forms part of Indian Railways’ larger programme for deployment of Kavach with LTE-based communication backbone across the railway network.
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Kavach is India’s indigenously developed Automatic Train Protection (ATP) system designed to enhance safety by preventing signal passing at danger (SPAD), over-speeding and train collisions.
The system continuously monitors train movement and automatically applies brakes whenever required, significantly improving operational safety.
Installation of Kavach on these routes will help achieve a higher level of safety in train operations by providing automatic train protection and collision avoidance capabilities.
In addition, Kavach enables safer and more reliable train movement during adverse weather conditions, including dense fog, thereby improving service reliability and punctuality.
The project is expected to benefit both passenger and freight train operations across key sections of Odisha and neighbouring regions served by East Coast Railway.
It will further strengthen Indian Railways’ ongoing mission to expand Kavach coverage across high-density and strategically important routes.
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