ABSTRACT

This book provides an overview and assessment of the security risks, both manmade and natural, facing the railways and rail networks.

Railroads face significant threats from disasters, but with situational awareness and coordinated effort these can often be substantially minimized. Transportation assets have always been vulnerable to natural disasters, but in the current environment these assets are also a preferred target of human-caused disruption, especially in the form of terrorism, as the events in many other parts of the world have underscored. Railways are not a homogeneous mode of transportation given their various roles in intercity and commuter passenger movement, as well as being a major portion of the freight ton-miles upon which the U.S. economy is highly dependent. Designed to provide advice for railway owners and first responders, this text discusses how to secure hazardous material transport and how to establish guidelines for rail freight operations and rail passenger operations. The book aims to develop an understanding of the unique operating characteristics of railways, the nature and the range of vulnerabilities, the present means for protecting the infrastructure, and the public policy initiatives that are prerequisite for developing a comprehensive appreciation of the magnitude of this issue. The book utilizes case studies of transport disasters to illustrate lessons learned and to provide critical insight into preventative measures.

This book will be of great interest to students and practitioners of transportation, technology and engineering, and security management.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction to railroad security

chapter 2|16 pages

U.S. railroad systems overview

chapter 3|21 pages

Securing the infrastructure

chapter 4|16 pages

Railroad policing efforts

chapter 5|21 pages

Securing rail freight operations I

Securing the logistics chain (including intermodal)

chapter 6|14 pages

Securing rail freight operations II

Hazardous materials

chapter 7|13 pages

Securing rail freight operations III

Hazmat and the specific case of crude oil and ethanol

chapter 8|17 pages

Commuter passenger rail

chapter 9|15 pages

Intercity passenger rail

chapter 11|10 pages

Protecting rail infrastructure

Where do we go from here?