Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen

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Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen
The port at Kirkenes was the northern terminus of the railway
Info
Type Railway
System Bjørnevatn Mine
Terminals Kirkenes
Bjørnevatn
No. of stations 0
Operation
Opened 1910
Closed 1997
Owner Sydvaranger
Operator(s) Sydvaranger
Character Iron ore
Technical
Line length 12 km
No. of tracks Single
Gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8½ in)
Electrification No
Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen
exKDSa
Finknuseverket
exDST
Kirkenes Station
exSBRÜCKE
E6
exTUNNEL2
Tunnelhaugen (ca. 80 m)
exDST
Bjørnevatn Station
exTUNNELa
Tappetunnelen

Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen or the Kirkenes-Bjørnevatn Line, sometimes also called Sydvarangerbanen, is an abandoned railway between the port at Kirkenes and the mine at Bjørnevatn in Sør-Varanger, Norway. Opened in 1910, the single track railway was used exclusively for ore-hauling freight trains. The line was the most northerly in the world until it was closed in 1997 when the mines were abandoned.

Contents

[edit] Rolling stock

The railway started out with steam locomotive pulled trains. Unlike other mining railways in Norway, like Ofotbanen, Thamshavnbanen and Rjukanbanen, Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen was never electrified. After World War II the company ordered two General Motors Electro-Motive Division G12 locomotives, built in 1954 and 1956. The company also operated one smaller engine. The only engine to survive is one G12 that is stored at Bjørnevatn.

[edit] Possible expansion

There are plans to connect the line to the Russian Railways at Nikel, only 40 km away from Kirkenes, to allow Russia access to the ice-free port at Kirkenes. The line has been under consideration since 1992, and is far from any final decision. The basis for the new port at Kirkenes is the full capacity of the ports in Murmansk and Archangelsk and will possibly concentrate on export of coal, petroleum and containers with import of grains.[1]. This would require the railway to be converted from standard gauge (1435 mm) to russian gauge (1520 mm).

During World War II the Nazi German occupants of Norway tried to connect Kirkenes and Kirkenes-Bjørnevatnbanen to the Norwegian railway network by extending the railway from Grong to Kirkenes, a stretch almost 2000 km long. Only parts of Nordlandsbanen were finished before the end of the war.

[edit] External links

[edit] References