India lags in the world of high-speed rail, but there is hope

My first high-speed train experience was in the mid-1970s ... on the big screen. I was still in school when the 1975 thriller The Bullet Train - in which a bomb is planted by a criminal gang and will explode if the train's speed is reduced - hit Indian cinemas. Audiences (me included) were floored by the speed of Japan's famed Shinkansen trains.

A nail-biting moment in the film - two high-speed trains running head-on avoid a catastrophic collision by switching tracks at the last moment - remains etched in my memory.

India has yet to see a high-speed train, though it did witness an aviation boom, thanks to the opening-up of the sector in 2002 and the launch of a low-cost airline in September 2003, which revolutionized flying in the country.



India lags in the world of high-speed rail, but there is hope

India lags in the world of high-speed rail, but there is hope

India lags in the world of high-speed rail, but there is hope

India lags in the world of high-speed rail, but there is hope
India lags in the world of high-speed rail, but there is hope
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