The collision of two freight trains in mid-November is still having an impact on Deutsche Bahn’s long-distance traffic. A section of the route between Hanover and Berlin is closed. Trains have to take long detours. But there is good news for travelers.

After the collision of two freight trains near Leiferde in Lower Saxony, train traffic on the closed route between Hanover and Berlin is to start again earlier than previously planned. From December 11th, the trains should roll again, announced Deutsche Bahn. So far, the company had planned to reopen the affected route on December 16th. “The high commitment of all employees and the support of the technical relief organization and the fire brigade ensured that the complicated rescue work could be completed faster than planned,” it said.

The salvage work was completed on Thursday. Specialists had recently jacked up the crashed locomotive on a special car. She should now be taken away. The railway announced that repair work on the route would begin in the evening.

Accordingly, in the next few days at the accident site, rails, sleepers and ballast on the two tracks are to be renewed and several catenary masts are to be repositioned. In addition, more than one and a half kilometers of overhead lines and almost two kilometers of cable for the control and safety technology are to be relaid. The floor also has to be replaced as one locomotive lost oil.

Until the release, long-distance trains between Berlin and North Rhine-Westphalia will be diverted via Uelzen. This increases travel times by at least 120 minutes. For long-distance passengers who want to postpone a planned trip due to the train collision, according to Bahn, a special goodwill applies up to and including December 23. Long-distance tickets that have already been booked can be used flexibly until then.

On November 17, a train consisting of 25 tank wagons filled with propane gas ran into another train that was stopping at a signal near Leiferde in the Gifhorn district. Four wagons overturned, one train driver was slightly injured. Firefighters needed days to pump the gas out of the wagons and burn it off with a special device. The accident causes many train cancellations and numerous disruptions to rail traffic on the route between Hanover and Berlin.