
Indian Railways to use RFID in wagons
NEW DELHI: The Indian Railways is all geared to conduct a pilot project
for automatic identification of railway wagons using Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID) system across India.
The Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS) will oversee the
pilot, run by a private firm.
According to highly placed sources at CRIS, the Indian Railways, decided
to use RFID for effectively monitoring and utilizing the movement of
wagons across the country.
??Indian Railways is the largest in the world and possesses about
230,000 freight wagons known freight railcars. Out of these, 200,000
wagons run on the Broad Gauge (BG) system. In order to improve the
effective utilization of these wagons, it is proposed to implement a
system of online tracking of these wagons as they move on the Railway
system (comprising approximately 62000 route kilometers, including 48000
route kilometers on the BG system), using automatic identification and
data capture methods,?? the sources said.
The sources said that during the 60-day pilot project, the railways
proposes to use Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology,
affixing RFID tag to about 500 wagons.
The pilot project envisages fixing of radio-frequency tag on 500 wagons
plying on a defined section and automatically reading the data at four
to five locations using both fixed and hand-held readers. It further
envisages moving and storing the data in near-real-time to a central
server located in CRIS, New Delhi. Interfaces from this server will
provide the data to Indian Railways?? Freight Operations Information
System (FOIS) and other applications,?? they said.
Sources said the pilot project shall be implemented in the Talcher ?C
Paradeep ?C Vishakhapatnam section of the East Coast Railway.
Data will be read at the entrance and exits to the yards at Talcher,
Paradeep, and Vishakhapatnam, and the data of wagon numbers read from
each tag, with timestamp, will be updated in the FOIS application and /
or with any other application at a later date.
Tag readers would be placed at various locations along the track.
Handheld readers would also be given to staff at key railway
installations. The readers would read identification data off the tag.
This data would be transmitted to a central server. The central server
would maintain historical data of wagon movement to enable tracing of
wagon movements as well. A set of standard interfaces would be built
into the central server for the use of different applications requiring
the wagon track and trace data, the sources informed.
Tagging of the wagons owned by Indian Railways and installation of
trackside readers would be executed in phases. The scope of the present
tender is a pilot project on one section of Indian Railways. Before
going in for a full-fledged implementation effort on IR, the results of
the pilot system will be intensively monitored and evaluated for a
period of approximately two months to identify potential problem areas
and formulate strategies to eliminate the identified problems, the
sources added.
The CRIS will also explore extending the system in future with encoding
information other than vehicle identification in a dynamic fashion onto
the tag, integration of sensor-based solution and integration with a GIS
system.
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