Central Organisation for Railway Electrification
The Central Organisation for Railway Electrification is the unit of Indian Railways responsible for electrification of the network. The organisation, founded in 1979, is headquartered in Prayagraj, Uttar Pradesh. Project units operate in Ahmedabad, Ambala, Bengaluru, Chennai, Danapur, Jaipur, Lucknow, New Jalpaiguri and Secunderabad.
CORE headquarters has Electrical, Signal and Telecommunications, Civil Engineering, Stores, Personnel, Vigilance and Finance departments headed by Chief Project Directors.
In line with a 2018 government decision, Indian Railways aims to electrify all of its broad gauge network., 68,701 route kilometres were electrified, which is 98.83% of the total broad-gauge network.
The entire electrified mainline rail network in India uses 25 kV AC; DC is used only for metros and trams.
History
1500 V DC
[Railway railway electrification|electrification system|Railway electrification] in India began with the first electric train, between Bombay Victoria Terminus and Kurla on the Great Indian Peninsula Railway's Harbour Line, on 3 February 1925. Steep grades on the Western Ghats necessitated the introduction of electric traction on the GIPR to Igatpuri on the North East Line and to Pune on the South East Line. 1500 V DC traction was introduced on the suburban section of the Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway between Colaba and Borivili on 5 January 1928, and between Madras Beach and Tambaram of the Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway on 11 May 1931, to meet growing traffic needs. The last sections of 1500 V DC in India, from Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, Mumbai to Panvel and Thane to Vashi, were upgraded to 25 kV AC in April 2016.3000 V DC
The electrification of the Howrah-Burdwan section of the Eastern Railway zone at 3000 V DC was completed in 1958. The first 3000 V DC EMU service began on the Howrah-Sheoraphuli section on 14 December 1957. The last section of 3000 V DC in India, from Howrah to Burdwan, was upgraded to 25 kV AC in 1968.25 kV AC
25 kV AC railway electrification emerged as an economical form of electrification as a result of research and trials in Europe, particularly on French Railways. Indian Railways decided to adopt the 25 kV AC system of electrification as a standard in 1957, with SNCF as their consultant in the early stages, later taken over by the "50 c/s Group". The joint venture was founded in 1954 by several European railway manufacturers and was dedicated to the development and construction of locomotives powered by 50 Hz alternating current. It arranged the supply contracts for the WAM-1, WAG-1 and WAG-3 locomotives and their spare parts.The first section electrified with the 25 kV AC system was Burdwan–Mughalsarai in 1957, followed by Tatanagar–Rourkela. Both of these sections were used for tests. The first section electrified for operational use was Raj Kharswan–Dongoaposi, on the South Eastern Railway zone, selected due to heavy freight traffic. The first electric train ran over this section on 15 December 1959. The first 25 kV AC EMUs, for Kolkata suburban service in Sealdah division, was introduced in 1963-4.