Japan Freight Railway Company
Native name | 日本貨物鉄道株式会社 |
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Public KK | |
Predecessor | Japanese National Railways (JNR) |
Founded | April 1, 1987 (privatization of JNR) |
Headquarters | 5-33-8, Sendagaya, Shibuya, Tokyo, Japan |
Services |
freight services other related services |
Owner | Japan Railway Construction, Transport and Technology Agency (100%) |
Number of employees | 6,661 (as of April 1, 2010)[1] |
Website | jrfreight.co.jp/english/index.html |
Japan Freight Railway Company (日本貨物鉄道株式会社 Nihon Kamotsu Tetsudō Kabushiki-gaisha), or JR Freight (JR貨物 Jeiāru Kamotsu), is one of the constituent companies of Japan Railways Group (JR Group). It provides transportation of cargo nationwide. Its headquarters are in Shibuya, Tokyo near Shinjuku Station.[1]
The Japan Railways Group was founded on April 1, 1987, when Japanese National Railways (JNR) was privatized, and then divided into six regional companies and Japan Freight Railway Company. Although the passenger operation of JNR was split into six companies, fares and regulations are standard for all companies and every region of Japan except Okinawa is covered by the railway network spanning approximately 19,800 kilometres (12,300 mi).
Formerly part of JNR, the freight operation was not divided and became a single separate company when JNR was privatized and split. Although it has only about fifty kilometers of track of its own, it also operates on track owned by the JR passenger railways and other companies. The company uses the initials JRF as an abbreviated name for identification.
Economics
As of 2015, transporting freight by rail is rather unpopular in Japan. Trucks remain the most popular method of freight transport. JR Freight has seen its share of the freight market gradually decrease since 1993. There have been attempts to move freight traffic from road to rail, but JR Freight has run a deficit for many years. [2]
Lines
While major part of the operation of JR Freight is on the tracks owned and maintained by other JR companies, JR Freight owns the railway lines (as Category-1 railway business) as follows:
Line | Endpoints | Locale (Prefecture) | Distance (km) |
---|---|---|---|
Hokuriku Main Line | Tsuruga Station - Tsuruga-Minato Freight Terminal | Fukui | 2.7 |
Kagoshima Main Line | Mojikō Station - Sotohama Freight Terminal | Fukuoka | 0.9 |
Chihaya Yard - Fukuoka Freight Terminal | Fukuoka | 2.2 | |
Kansai Main Line | Yokkaichi Station - Shiohama Station | Mie | 3.3 |
Hirano Station - Kudara Freight Terminal | Osaka | 1.4 | |
Nippō Main Line | Obase-Nishikōdai-mae Station - Kandakō Freight Terminal | Fukuoka | 4.6 |
Ōu Main Line | Tsuchizaki Station - Akitakō Freight Terminal | Akita | 1.8 |
Senseki Line | Rikuzen-Yamashita Station - Ishinomakikō Freight Terminal | Miyagi | 1.8 |
Shin'etsu Main Line | Kami-Nuttari Junction - Nuttari Freight Terminal | Niigata | 1.8 |
Kami-Nuttari Junction - Higashi-Niigatakō Freight Terminal | Niigata | 3.8 | |
Shinminato Line | Nōmachi Station - Takaoka Freight Terminal | Toyama | 1.9 |
Tōhoku Main Line | Tabata Freight Terminal - Kita-Ōji Freight Terminal | Tokyo | 4.0 |
Tōkaidō Main Line | Sannō Junction - Nagoya-Minato Freight Terminal | Aichi | 6.2 |
Suita Junction - Osaka Freight Terminal | Osaka | 8.7 | |
Uetsu Main Line | Sakata Station - Sakatakō Freight Terminal | Yamagata | 2.7 |
Rolling stock
JR Freight owns a variety of rolling stock, including
- Diesel locomotives
- Hybrid diesel-battery locomotives
- DC electric locomotives
- AC electric locomotives
- AC/DC electric locomotives
- M250 series freight EMUs
- Covered and uncovered cars with capacities up to 36 tons
- Carriers for automobiles, trucks and containers
- Large cars with capacities up to 80 tons
- Coal and hopper cars
See also
References
- 1 2 Japan Freight Railway Company. "Corporate Overview". Retrieved November 16, 2011.
- ↑ WISETJINDAWAT, W.; et al. (2015). "Rare Mode Choice in Freight Transport: Modal Shift from Road to Rail". Journal of the Eastern Asia Society for Transportation Studies. 11: 774–787. doi:10.11175/easts.11.774.
- ↑ "JR貨物 新幹線との供用走行専用の新型機関車を導入" [JR Freight to introduce new locomotives for inter-running with shinkansen]. Tetsudō Daiya Jōhō Magazine. Vol. 41 no. 337. Japan: Kōtsū Shimbun. May 2012. p. 70.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to JR Freight. |
- http://www.jrfreight.co.jp/ (Japanese)
- http://www.jrfreight.co.jp/english/ (English)
JR Group | ||||||
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past: Japanese Government Railways | Japanese National Railways | JNR Settlement Corporation | ||||||
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JR Bus Companies | JR Hokkaido Bus | JR Bus Tohoku | JR Tokai Bus | West JR Bus | JR Shikoku Bus | JR Kyushu Bus |
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See also | Shinkansen - Railway Museum - Modern Transportation Museum - SCMaglev and Railway Park - SoftBank Telecom |