The trial run of Delhi Metro's swanky new 'driver-less' trains began Tuesday, setting the ball rolling on what promises to be a technological
feat in the country's public transport system in little more than a
year, when they will run on 'unattended' mode.
Delhi Chief Minister
Arvind Kejriwal and Union Urban Development Minister Venkaiah Naidu
flagged off one such train equipped to travel on 'Unattended Train
Operations' mode at the Mukundpur depot of metro's upcoming Majlis Park -
Shiv Vihar corridor (Line 7).
In their speeches, Naidu and
Kejriwal insisted that metro was one of the best answers to the city's
commutation and pollution woes. Kejriwal thanked the Centre and termed
DMRC as a 'unique example' of cooperative federalism.
Naidu said
that odd-even was a temporary measure and "cannot be a permanent
solution" and said new technology was set to increase metro's frequency
to 90 seconds.
"As we kept on saying during odd-even, till the
time we don't improve our public transport system, one that which
inspires car owners to move opt for public transport, pollution or
congestion will not come down," Kejriwal said.
Trial run of
trains, that were unveiled last month, will take place between the depot
and Majlis Park station, one of the terminal stations of the upcoming
Pink Line, for the next few days. Gradually the distance covered by them
will be increased, a metro official said.
The new trains will
undergo rigorous trials to ensure that they are ready for smooth
operations after the commissioning of the 58-km-long Mukundpur- Shiv
Vihar and the 34-km-long Janakpuri (West)- Botanical Garden corridors ,
by the end of this year, although initially, train operators will run
them.
"Gradually, driver-less operations, on the Unattended Train
Operation (UTO) mode, will be possible and later on, in stages, the new
signalling technology - Communication Based Train Control (CBTC) - will
be implemented which will bring the time gap between to two trains to 90
seconds instead of the current average of two minutes," an official
said.