Investigators Confirm Passenger Train in Scotland Hit Landslide Before Derailment

August 17, 2020

A passenger train hit a landslide before derailing in Scotland [on Wednesday, Aug. 12], killing three people, UK rail investigators confirmed Friday.

A train track obstruction had been suspected of playing a role in Wednesday’s derailment near the coastal town of Stonehaven, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) northeast of Edinburgh, because it happened after heavy rain and flooding in the area.

“Thankfully, fatal derailments are a rare occurrence on the UK’s national network,” Simon French, chief inspector of rail accidents, said. “However, landslips and other earthworks failures remain a risk to trains that needs to be constantly managed – and this is becoming even more challenging for the rail industry due to the increasing incidence of extreme weather events.”

The Rail Accident Investigation Branch, which French oversees, said that after the train derailed, it kept going in a straight line as the track curved to the right. The lead power car struck a bridge parapet and fell down a wooded embankment with the third passenger car.

Prince Charles is visiting the accident site Friday to thank emergency workers who came to help others in rugged terrain.

Infrastructure manager Network Rail dispatched engineers, contractors and surveyors in helicopters to assess sites similar to the location of the derailment.

Photograph: Emergency services inspect the scene following a train derailment near Stonehaven, Scotland, in photo taken on Thursday, Aug. 13, 2020. British Transport Police say three people died and six were taken to the hospital with injuries after a passenger train derailed in northeast Scotland on Aug. 12, after heavy rain and flooding. The train driver and conductor are believed to be among the dead, but formal identification is pending. Photo credit: Ben Birchall/PA via AP.

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