Pakistan Railways earns Rs55b in eight months

ISLAMABAD   -  Pakistan Railways has earned Rs 55 bil­lion in the first eight months of the cur­rent financial year 2023-24, despite fac­ing a financial crisis due to floods in the monsoon season. During the first eight months of the last financial year (2022-23), the department earned Rs 37 billion, a historic increase in revenue during the same period of the current financial year (2023-24), a ministry official told APP.

According to the data, he said that out of the revenue of Rs 55 billion, revenue was derived from passenger and freight trains while other sectors of the depart­ment also contributed to the total revenue. The department is expecting to generate revenues up to Rs 80 billion by the end of this financial year through the consistent efforts and hard work of the Railway work­ers, the official added. At present, he said that Pakistan Railways is operating 96 pas­senger trains, up from the previous year when 86 trains were running. Similarly, during the previous year, on average it op­erated 3.75 freight trains while the num­ber reached seven freight trains this year.

He said the department emphasized that the issue of delay in payment of sala­ries to employees has now been resolved and things will be more streamlined, once work on the Mainline-I (ML-I) proj­ect kicks off. The official said that owing to inflationary pressures, led by high fuel costs, Pakistan Railways has increased its fares, both for passenger and freight seg­ments that would help the cash-strapped corporation to fetch better revenues in the next few months. To a question, he said that Pakistan Railways has beefed up precautionary measures to reduce pas­senger train accidents and only six minor accidents with no causality took place on the entire railway network in the country during the last three months. “Only two train accidents have taken place in Sep­tember, no accident happened in October and four train accidents occurred in No­vember due to effective steps of the de­partment,” he added.

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