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Company type | joint-stock company |
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Industry | Railway transportation, Railway infrastructure, intermodal freight transport |
Founded | 1991 |
Headquarters | 5 Jerzy Giedroyc Street , Kyiv, Ukraine, 03680 [1] |
Number of locations | 1,700 stations and halts |
Area served | Ukraine |
Key people | Oleksandr Pertsovskyi (CEO) [2] |
Products | Rail transport services (passenger & cargo) |
Revenue | ₴20.06 billion (2017)[3] |
₴203.8 million (2018)[4] | |
Owner | Ukraine (100%) |
Number of employees | 191,700 (2023) |
Parent | Ministry of Infrastructure |
Divisions | 6 branches (Kyiv, Donetsk, Lviv, Odesa, Kharkiv, Dnipro) |
Website | Official website |
Ukrainian Railways or Ukrzaliznytsia (UZ) (Ukrainian: Укрзалізниця) is a state-owned joint-stock company administering railway infrastructure and rail transport in Ukraine; a monopoly that controls the vast majority of the railroad transportation in the country.[a] Ukrainian Railways is the world's sixth largest rail passenger transporter and world's seventh largest freight transporter. As of 2020, the total length of the main broad-gauge (1,520 mm) railroad network was 19,787 kilometres (12,295 mi),[5] making it the 13th largest in the world. Ukraine also has many stretches of standard-gauge railway (1,435 mm), and is currently working to expand these in order to improve its connections to the European Union.[6]
In 2015, Ukrainian Railways was transformed through a merger of a state agency and a state-owned enterprise into a public joint stock company owned by the state. Ukraine's State Administration of Railroad Transportation is subordinated to the Ministry of Infrastructure,[b] administering the railways through the six territorial railway companies that immediately control and provide of all aspects of the railroad transportation and maintenance under the common Ukrzaliznytsia brand. The general director of the administration is appointed by the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine.[7] The gauge is 1,520 mm (4 ft 11+27⁄32 in). The company employs more than 191,700 people throughout the country.[8]
During the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Ukrainian Railways continued operating to evacuate and rescue millions of people from cities out of the country. The rail links between Ukraine and Russia have been blown up by the Armed Forces of Ukraine to prevent their use by Russians, but the railways have continued operating within Ukraine and between Ukraine and Poland, Hungary, Republic of Moldova, and Slovakia. One long-abandoned cross-border rail link with Poland was quickly reconstructed, and others which had been used only for freight have been quickly opened for passenger use.[9] The rail service has evacuated[10] over two million people from Ukraine on special evacuation trains. After some of the Black Sea ports became unavailable for grain export, rail became an export route to the rest of Europe. Several rail sections in the North and South became unusable.[11]
UZ stats 2020
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