10. Russia
Train: Siemens Velaro RUS
Top Speed: 175 mph
Capacity: 600 passengers
Russia’s  fastest high-speed train runs on the Moscow-St. Petersburg line, and  made its debut in December 2009. The German-built Velaro RUS trains,  also known as the Sapsan, have cut the travel time for the 401-mile  route from eight hours to three hours and 45 minutes. The 10-car  passenger trains operate at a maximum speed of 155 mph, but hit a speed  record of 175 mph during trials in 2009. The eight high-speed trains are  worth nearly $1 billion. Russia is eager to expand its high-speed rail  network ahead of hosting the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The country has  invited foreign investors to bid on development contracts for new lines  that will link its cities.
Here  we compiled a list of the countries with world’s fastest trains based  on the maximum speed measured in miles per hour (mph). We’ve included  record speeds hit during trial runs on electric and magnetic levitation  (Maglev) trains, as well as those of experimental models. The numbers  are based on a series of publicly available reports, as well as  information from organizations such as the Railway Gazette International  and the Center for Asia Pacific Aviation. More after the break...
09. Taiwan
Train: THSR 700T
Top Speed: 186 mph
Capacity: 989 passengers
Taiwan’s  high-speed rail project, which cost a total of $18 billion, is one the  world’s largest privately funded rail construction plans. The country’s  THSR 700T trains have cut travel time from 4.5 hours to 90 minutes on  the 214-mile route from the northern capital of Taipei to the southern  city of Kaohsiung. The 30 high-speed trains, which began operations in  2007, are based on the Japanese 700 Series Shinkansen “bullet train”  model. A record 36.9 million passengers rode the trains in 2010, a 14  percent increase from the year before. The country’s high-speed rail  system has been making headlines recently after the government said the  network might not last more than 10 years because of sinking land caused  by the overuse of groundwater. Last month, the government said it would  cap deep groundwater wells that threaten the structural base of the  high-speed system.
08. South Korea
Train: KTX-I
Top Speed: 190 mph
Capacity: 965
South  Korea’s high-speed rail network, known as Korea Train eXpress (KTX),  carries more than 100,000 passengers a day on its two lines. In April  2010, a record 178,584 people used the country’s high-speed rail  network. After 12 years of construction, the first high-speed line was  opened in 2004, slashing travel time from the capital Seoul to the port  city of Busan to two hours and 40 minutes, half the time it took  previously. The travel time between the two cities was reduced by a  further 22 minutes when a second line was opened.
The  impact of high-speed rail has been felt by the domestic airline  industry, which has seen its capacity shrink by more than 30 percent  between 2003 and 2007. Although the introduction of low-cost air  carriers in the country has helped demand for air travel grow again,  passenger levels are still below what they used to be before high-speed  rail was introduced.
07. United Kingdom
Train: Eurostar 3313/14
Top Speed: 208 mph
Capacity: 750 passengers
The  Eurostar has changed the way Western Europeans travel. Since it began  operations in 1994, the London-based high-speed rail network connects  England with cities in France and Belgium via an underground tunnel in  the English Channel, often referred to as the “Chunnel.” With 27 trains  and links to more than 100 destinations across Europe, the network  marked its 100 millionth passenger in August 2009. The rail line carries  passengers at speeds of up to 186 mph. The Eurostar 3313/14 broke a  British rail record set in 1979 by reaching speeds of 208 mph in 2003.  The rail network was recently taken to court by French train-maker  Alstom over its decision to give a $600 million contract for 10 new  trains to German builder Siemens. However, a U.K. court rejected the  application to have the contract suspended. Alstom is the world’s second  biggest train maker and the supplier of all existing Eurostar trains.
06. Italy
Train: ETR 500 Frecciarossa
Top Speed: 225 mph
Capacity: 590 passengers
One  of the early pioneers of European high-speed rail technology, Italy is  home to Europe’s first high-speed train line. The Florence-Rome  high-speed line made history when more than half of its entire  length—the first 86 miles from Rome to Citta della Pieve—opened in 1977.  Trains on the track reached a maximum speed of 160 mph. Since then, the  country’s high-speed rail network has grown substantially, with  high-speed lines reaching as far north as Torino to as far south as  Napoli. The Italian-made ETR 500 is the fastest train series in the  country, with its ETR 500 Y1 model hitting speeds of up to 225 mph in  2009 on a trip between Florence and Bologna. Not everyone is happy with  the progress, however. Earlier this month, more than 200 people were  injured in a rally against the construction of a planned 36-mile tunnel  in the northern Susa valley that would cut three hours off the current  seven-hour train journey between Paris and Milan. Protesters say the  high-speed line will ruin the area and its construction could release  harmful chemicals.
05. Spain
Train: AVE Class 103
Speed: 251 mph
Capacity: 404 passengers
Spain  has the longest high-speed rail network in Europe, with 3,433 miles of  tracks. With six high-speed train lines and several under construction,  the Spanish government aims to have 90 percent of its population within  31 miles of a high-speed station by 2020. The country’s fastest trains  are the AVE series, which is manufactured by several train makers,  including Siemens, Alstom and Bombardier. The Siemens-made AVE Class 103  train began commercial service in 2007, and hit a record speed of 251  mph during a test run between Madrid and Zaragoza. The maximum top speed  for commercial trains in Spain is limited to 186 mph for passenger  safety. The euro-zone debt crisis and Portugal’s austerity plan have  halted a major expansion plan, which would have linked Spain’s capital  Madrid with Lisbon in Portugal. The high-speed train link would have cut  travel time between the two cities to two hours and 45 minutes instead  of the current nine hours.
Train: Transrapid TR-07
Speed: 270.3 mph
Capacity: Experimental
Germany  is a nation that has been at the forefront of high-speed rail  technology. It’s home to Siemens, the world’s largest manufacturer of  high-speed trains. German companies Siemens and ThyssenKrupp have  developed the Transrapid system, high-speed monorail trains operating on  magnetic levitation (Maglev) technology, that can reach speeds of 311  mph. In 2004, the Shanghai Maglev train in China was the first  commercial Transrapid train to carry passengers, hitting speeds of 267  mph. Although the magnetic levitation trains are developed in Germany,  they have never been used commercially in the country. The technology  has faced several setbacks, including high costs and a crash that killed  25 people during a test run in 2006. Instead, the InterCityExpress  (ICE) system has been adopted nationwide since 1991. These high-speed  trains hit speeds of 199 mph and connect German cities with cities in  Switzerland, Austria, Belgium and the Netherlands. An ICE train disaster  near the German village of Eschede in 1998 is considered the world’s  deadliest high-speed rail accident, leading to the deaths of 101 people.
03. China
Train: CRH380AL
Speed: 302 mph
Capacity: 600 passengers
China has the world’s longest high-speed rail network with more than 6,000 miles of routes in service.
It  also boasts the longest high-speed rail route, with the opening of its  Beijing-Shanghai line earlier this month. The 819-mile route was made  using 60 million cubic meters of concrete, twice the amount used in the  Three Gorges Dam. While the CRH380AL trains operate at a speed of 186  mph, the train hit a record speed of 302 mph in a test run. China’s  first high-speed line, which opened in 2007, saw 40.6 million passengers  travel on it in just the first two years. The government hopes to  stretch China’s rapidly growing high-speed network to 28,000 miles by  the end of 2015.
02. France
Train: TGV V150
Speed: 357 mph
Capacity: Experimental
France sped ahead of the rest of Europe in the race to build the first fully functioning high-speed rail network.
The  first Alstom developed TGV trains hit the tracks in 1981, with service  between Paris and Lyon. Since then, the network has expanded to service  150 destinations within France and neighboring countries. Limited to a  speed of up to 200 mph during normal service, the experimental TGV V150  hit a record speed of 357 mph in 2007—making it the second fastest train  in the world. TGV’s high-speed technology is used in national trains in  many European countries including the U.K., Belgium, the Netherlands,  and Germany. Last month, French train maker Alstom signed a preliminary  deal to build a high-speed rail line in Iraq linking the cities of  Baghdad and Basra.
01. Japan
Train: JR-Maglev MLX01
Speed: 361 mph
Capacity: Experimental
Japan  is the world leader when it comes to high-speed trains, opening the  world’s first modern high-speed rail in 1964. The Japanese first made a  breakthrough in the field when they introduced the first series of the  Tokaido Shinkansen “bullet trains,” which could reach a top speed of 130  mph. The early bullet trains carried more than 100 million passengers  in just the first three years. Today, the trains are still operating on  the world’s busiest rail line, carrying 378,000 passengers a day. Maglev  trains have also been developed in Japan since the 1970s. The  government has approved plans for a $112.4 billion project to build a  Maglev train line between Tokyo, Nagoya, and Osaka, with a completion  date of 2027. These planned high-speed trains are expected to cut the  current travel time between Tokyo and Osaka from two hours and 18  minutes on the Shinkansen to just over an hour. Currently, the  experimental JR-Maglev MLXO1 is considered the world’s fastest train,  with a top speed of 361 mph in a test run in 2003.
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