HSE PUBLISHES FINAL REPORT INTO CHANCERY LANE TUBE DERAILMENT

17 Mar 2006 11:45 AM

The Health and Safety Executive's (HSE) HM Railway Inspectorate (HMRI) today published its web-based report into the Central Line train derailment at Chancery Lane tube station on 25 January 2003. ( www.hse.gov.uk/railways/chancerylane/index.htm).

The report concludes that London Underground Limited (LUL) and Infraco BCV Ltd (iBCV) (now Metronet Rail BCV Ltd) had done what was reasonably practicable with regard to both maintenance procedures and the operational response to the incident. The immediate cause of the derailment was the detachment of the rearmost traction motor on the fifth car, itself caused by gearbox failure.

HSE has decided that formal enforcement action is not appropriate in this instance. The companies' responses to the incident and issues leading up to it, although capable of improvement, fell within the range of being reasonable in the light of available knowledge and industry practice at the time. Staff from both companies co-operated with HSE on this investigation.

The HSE investigation into the derailment also reviewed two earlier incidents involving traction motors at Hainault and Loughton in 2001 and 2002 respectively. HSE concluded that the investigations carried by LUL and iBCV into these incidents could have been completed more quickly, been more wide-ranging and less bound by engineering assumptions about their causes.

However, there is no suggestion that this directly led to the Chancery Lane derailment taking place. In HSE's view, iBCV and LUL made reasonable efforts to find out the cause of these earlier failures. Both companies applied engineering judgment based on industry knowledge of the risks at the time. They identified what they thought was the cause of the failures, and devised and implemented what they believed were appropriate safety measures.

HSE also found that communications during the incident could have been more robust, as could information and technical advice given to the line controllers. But despite this, the line controller erred on the side of caution and decided to take the train out of service at Holborn. Unfortunately the train derailed some 600 metres short of this point.

LUL's own investigation report into the derailment made seven primary and seventeen secondary recommendations. HMRI has monitored progress with implementation of these recommendations and is satisfied that LUL and Metronet Rail BCV Ltd have acted to learn the lessons from the derailment to help prevent another similar incident.

Notes to editors

1. At around 13.50 on 25 January 2003 a London Underground Limited (LUL) westbound Central Line train derailed as it came into Chancery Lane station. The train had around 500 passengers on board, and the last four cars of the eight-car train were derailed. Although there was little structural damage, three of the cars were damaged due to impact with the tunnel wall and station platform, with one of the doors being ripped off and a number of windows broken. 32 passengers received relatively minor injuries such as cuts, bruises and, in one case, a broken ankle. LUL staff promptly evacuated passengers on the train.

2. HSE's HMRI report into the Central Line's train derailment at Chancery Lane is available from HSE's website at
www.hse.gov.uk/railways/chancerylane/index.htm

3. HMRI, together with specialists from other branches of HSE, began an investigation into the train derailment at Chancery Lane station on Saturday 25 January 2003. Initial findings and an interim report are available on the Chancery Lane pages of the HSE website at www.hse.gov.uk/railways/chancerylane/index.htm

4. Decisions on prosecution and enforcement action are made under the auspices of the Code for Crown Prosecutors and the Health and Safety Commission's (HSC) Enforcement Policy Statement. The Code is available from the Crown Prosecution Service website at
www.cps.gov.uk/publications/docs/code2004english.pdf. The HSC's Enforcement Policy Statement is available from HSE's website at www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/hsc15.pdf.

5. Further information on the latest (2004) safety related statistics in relation to London Underground is available as part of HSE's annual report on railway safety on the website at

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