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Mumbai-Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail Corridor Expansion

Mumbai-Ahmedabad High-Speed Rail Corridor Expansion

On 3 July 2026 India and Japan reaffirmed their commitment to accelerate the Mumbai–Ahmedabad High‑Speed Rail corridor, with Japan supporting commencement of commercial operations on the priority section by 2027.

Project overview

  • Length & stations: ~508 km with 12 planned stations.
  • Speeds & travel time: Designed for 350 km/h; operational speed 320 km/h; Mumbai–Ahmedabad travel time ~1 hr 58 min.
  • Timeline: First service on priority section expected August 2027 (Surat–Vapi); full commercial service targeted by 2029 (some targets cite end‑2028).
  • Key structures: 25 river bridges, 28 steel bridges (14 of 17 in Gujarat completed) and India’s first undersea rail tunnel.

Technology & standards

  • Proven platform: Japanese Shinkansen technology is being used.
  • Electrical & track systems: 2×25 kV overhead electrification and J‑Slab ballastless track technology.
  • Control systems: Advanced signalling and train‑control suites adapted for high‑speed operations.

Manufacturing, depots & skills

  • Indigenisation: Integral Coach Factory and BEML developing 280 km/h train sets under Make in India/Aatmanirbhar Bharat.
  • Depots: Rolling stock depots at Sabarmati, Surat and Thane.
  • Skilling & employment: High‑Speed Rail Training Institute in Vadodara; ~4,000 direct and 35,000–40,000 indirect jobs estimated.

Standardised expansion template

  • Network plan: Seven additional corridors identified, ~4,000 km total.
  • Investment estimate: Approx. ₹16 lakh crore for proposed corridors.
  • Objective: Unified designs, construction methods and operational practices to reduce costs and shorten delivery timelines.

IASPOINT Booster Facts

  • Implementing agency: National High Speed Rail Corporation Limited (NHSRCL) is the special purpose vehicle for MAHSR implementation.
  • Gauge: Shinkansen systems use standard gauge (1,435 mm) as opposed to India’s broad gauge.
  • Rolling stock classification: Train sets designed for commercial operation at speeds ≥ 250 km/h are classified as high‑speed rail by global standards.
Last Modified: July 3, 2026

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