Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
Railway tracks on embankment and bridge
Railway tracks on embankment and bridge - Credit: Megaloman1ac / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
rail safety
ProRail
railway embankment
Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management
Monday, 11 December 2023 - 12:00

Share this article:

Over half of railway embankments in Netherlands do not meet safety standards: report

About 1,400 kilometers of railway embankments do not meet the safety standards. The soil under the rail is too weak and can lead to derailments, the Volkskrant reports based on a study commissioned by ProRail. The rail manager says further research is required, but train traffic is currently still safe.

ProRail asked four engineering firms to investigate the railway embankments - raised areas of land on which rails rest. Since 2017, the rail manager has found several places where the embankments were too weak to drive over at high speed.

The study started in 2021. The engineering firms studied elevation maps, geological maps, and information from soil drillings. They concluded that 1,400 of the 2,600 kilometers of railway embankments are not strong enough to hold a stationary train at its full weight without collapsing - the safety standard.

The most vulnerable railway embankments are in the Randstad, the north of the Netherlands, and Zeeland. In those regions, the subsoil mainly consists of clay or peat, or a combination of the two, which is less firm than sand.

According to ProRail, the results prompted further investigation - which the four involved engineering firms recently started - but are no reason for concern about railway safety. “The safety standard is conservative,” Jasper Ingram, who coordinated the research at ProRail, told the Volkskrant. “Moreover, not a single [railway embankment] has collapsed in the 105 years. We, therefore, still consider train traffic to be safe.”

Ingram added that it is impossible to predict when an embankment will subside. “And we don’t yet know exactly what causes it. The chance of this happening is small, but the consequences are great. If a train runs off the track, it can lead to serious injuries and deaths.”

ProRail has imposed speed limits over some embankments and has even done repairs to some in Zeeland. But no restrictions apply to many vulnerable railway embankments. According to ProRail, they’re unnecessary at this stage, repairs would be extremely costly, and intervention would have big consequences for the timetables of NS and other carriers.

The Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management told the Volkskrant that “much is still unclear” about the quality of railway embankments and how that will develop in the future. “The track is used intensively, and we want to use it even more intensively in the future. That also demands a lot from the railway.” The Ministry stressed that trains can “currently run safely on Dutch railways.”

More like this

Image
A cab-control car and coach from a NS night train service that derailed in an accident with a crane in Voorschoten. 4 April 2023
Gov't focused more on keeping rail usable during work, not safety in Voorschoten crash
Image
Aftermath of a train crashing into a truck at a railway crossing on Bredestraat in Meteren, 30 October 2025
Number of major rail disruptions already past the allowed limit for 2025
Image
ProRail workers in the Schiphol tunnel
Infrastructure budget cuts hindering international train connections in Amsterdam
Image
Eurostar in Amsterdam
Possible solution found to keep Eurostar running during Amsterdam CS renovation
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Stretch your holiday pay: Bunq makes vakantiegeld last with 2.51% savings interest promo
  • British man, 21, missing since Rotterdam TwitchCon visit found dead
  • Esther Ouwehand steps down as Partij voor de Dieren leader after seven years
  • British man stabbed to death in Heerhugowaard was wanted for Amsterdam double murder
  • Dutch poet laureate Lieke Marsman dead at age 35 after lengthy fight against cancer

Top stories

  • Dutch companies imported €2 billion worth of dangerous designer drugs from India
  • Rate of birth complications higher in poorer neighborhoods
  • At least 8 Dutch men suspected of drugging, raping, filming their wives, girlfriends
  • Court rules Ye can remain in Netherlands for Arnhem performances this week
  • New A'dam coalition planning parking +tourist tax hike, free public transport for kids

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content