Renfe
Adapted from Wikipedia · Discoverer experience
Renfe is the national railway company of Spain, owned by the government. It was created in 2005 when the old Spanish National Railway Network was split into two parts. One part, called ADIF, took care of the railway infrastructure, like tracks and stations. The other part, Renfe-Operadora, took care of running the trains and services for passengers and goods. Today, Renfe operates many trains across Spain, helping people travel quickly and efficiently.
History
Further information: History of rail transport in Spain
Renfe started as the Red Nacional de los Ferrocarriles Españoles on January 24, 1941, when Spain's railways were brought together under one group. In 2005, Renfe was split into two parts: Renfe Operadora for running the trains, and ADIF for taking care of the tracks and stations. This change helped make sure who runs the trains and who looks after the tracks were separate jobs.
Before 2005, Renfe was in charge of everything, but now there are other train companies like Ouigo España and Iryo that also offer passenger services.
Structure
Renfe-Operadora took over the tasks of running passenger and freight train services from the old Renfe. In January 2006, it organized its work into four main areas: suburban and medium-distance trains, long-distance and high-speed trains, freight services, and maintaining and building trains.
In June 2013, Renfe changed its structure again, creating four separate companies under one main company: one for passenger trains, one for freight, one for maintaining trains, and one for renting out trains.
Figures
Operations
Renfe operates about 12,000 kilometers of railway tracks, with 7,000 kilometers of them having electricity to power the trains. Most of these tracks use a special width called the Iberian gauge, which is a bit wider than the usual track width used in many other places.
The company has built special fast train lines, called high-speed rail, connecting big cities like Madrid, Seville, Barcelona, and others. These fast trains can go very quickly, up to 350 kilometers per hour. Renfe also runs regular trains between cities and helps people travel around big city areas with local train services.
| Figures | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | 2009 | 2010 | 2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Passengers (Mio.) | 527,975 | 517,583 | 510,176 | 476,334 | 463,012 | 476,917 | 472,145 | 466,057 | 464,961 | 465,201 | 471,359 | 487,881 | 507,088 | 510,453 |
| Passenger-kilometer (Mio.) | 20,480 | 20,167 | 22,281 | 21,895 | 21,166 | 21,585 | 21,319 | 22,563 | 23,754 | 24,825 | 25,291 | 26,060 | 26,931 | 27,263 |
| AVE Passengers (Tsd.) | 4.878 | 5.559 | 11.461 | 11.250 | 10.851 | 12.563 | 12.101 | 14.697 | 17.967 | 19.428 | 20.352 | 21.108 | 21.332 | 22.370 |
| AVE Passenger-kilometer (Tsd.) | 1.884 | 2.161 | 4.888 | 5.260 | 5.171 | 5.846 | 5.793 | 7.095 | 8.038 | 9.230 | 9.632 | 10.267 | 10.289 | 10.760 |
Passenger rolling stock
Renfe-Operadora uses different types of trains and services in its two main groups.
Suburban and Medium Distance (DGSPCMD)
This group includes commuter services on both meter gauge and Iberian gauge tracks, as well as medium distance services on mainline tracks, both Iberian and metric gauges, and high-speed medium distance services.
Long Distance (DGSLD)
This group includes luxury tourist train services, mainline long distance services, and high-speed long distance services.
Prototype rolling stock
There are also prototype trains being tested.
Future rolling stock
Plans are in place for future trains that will be added to the fleet.
| Rolling stock | Region(s) | Image |
|---|---|---|
| Renfe Class 433 EMU | Asturias | |
| Renfe Class 435 EMU | Asturias | |
| Renfe Class 436 EMU | Asturias Basque Country Cantabria | |
| Renfe Class 438 EMU | Cantabria | |
| Renfe Class 442 EMU | Madrid | |
| Renfe Class 526 DMU | Asturias Castile and León | |
| Renfe Class 529 DMU | Castile and León Galicia Murcia |
| Rolling stock | Route(s) | Image |
|---|---|---|
| Renfe Class 440/470 EMU (to be phased out) | Córdoba – Rabanales León – Ponferrada – Vigo León – Gijón Valladolid – Santander Valladolid – Ávila Valladolid – León Valencia − Barcelona Valencia − Alicante | |
| Renfe Class 448 EMU | Catalunya Aragón | |
| Renfe Class 449 EMU | Madrid – Jaén León – Ponferrada – Orense – Vigo Sevilla – Cádiz Barcelona – Girona – Figueres – Portbou Huelva – Sevilla Jaén – Córdoba – Sevilla – Cadiz Madrid − Alcázar de San Juan − Albacete Madrid − Alcázar de San Juan − Ciudad Real Alicante – Albacete – Ciudad Real Madrid − León Madrid – Vitoria Irun - Vitoria - Miranda de Ebro Córdoba – Bobadilla Barcelona – Reus Barcelona – Tortosa | |
| Renfe Class 592 DMU (to be phased out) | Madrid – Talavera Murcia – Cartagena Valencia − Alcoi CELTA: Oporto - Vigo (Service CP) | |
| Renfe Class 594 DMU | Valladolid – Zamora – Puebla de Sanabria A Coruña – Ferrol A Coruña – Lugo – Monforte de Lemos - Ourense Madrid – Soria Murcia – Cartagena | |
| Renfe Class 598 DMU | Cáceres – Valencia de Alcántara Sevilla – Cáceres - Madrid | |
| Renfe Class 599 DMU | Madrid – Badajoz Huelva – Zafra A Coruña – Vigo Guixar Salamanca – Ávila – Madrid Salamanca – Palencia Valencia – Cartagena Zaragoza – Valencia Zaragoza – Cartagena Sevilla – Málaga Sevilla – Almería Granada – Algeciras Málaga – Ronda Granada – Linares Madrid − Águilas |
| Rolling stock | Region(s) | Image |
|---|---|---|
| Renfe Class 524 DMU | Ferrol – Oviedo Oviedo – Santander Santander – Bilbao | |
| Renfe Class 527 DMU | Ferrol – Oviedo Oviedo – Santander Santander – Bilbao Bilbao – León |
| Rolling stock | Route(s) | Image |
|---|---|---|
| Renfe Class 104 EMU | Madrid – Toledo Madrid – Ciudad Real Málaga – Granada Sevilla – Córdoba Barcelona – Camp De Tarragona Sevilla - Málaga | |
| Renfe Class 114 EMU | Madrid – Puertollano Madrid – Valladolid Barcelona – Figueres Barcelona – Lleida Sevilla – Granada | |
| Renfe Class 121 EMU | Cádiz – Jaén A Coruña – Ourense A Coruña – Vigo Urzaiz Madrid – Ponferrada Ponferrada-Vigo Madrid – Gandia Madrid-Salamanca |
| Service(s) | Route(s) | Locomotive | Passenger Car | Image |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercity | Madrid – Algeciras Madrid – Granada Madrid – Murcia – Cartagena Madrid – Almería Barcelona – Murcia – Cartagena/Lorca Madrid – Cáceres – Badajoz | Renfe Class 334 Locomotive | Talgo Pendular | |
| Madrid – Almería Barcelona – Murcia – Cartagena/Lorca Madrid – Valencia | Renfe Class 252 Locomotive | Talgo Pendular |
| Service | Rolling stock | Route(s) | Image |
|---|---|---|---|
| AVE | Renfe Class 100 EMU | Madrid – Sevilla Madrid – Castellón Huesca–Sevilla | |
| Renfe Class 102 EMU | Madrid – León Madrid – Huesca Valencia – Sevilla | ||
| Renfe Class 103 EMU | Madrid – Barcelona – Figueres Madrid – Málaga Barcelona – Málaga | ||
| Renfe Class 106 EMU | Gijón–Castellón Madrid–Gijón Madrid–A Coruña Madrid–Vigo Madrid – Murcia Madrid – Marseille Barcelona – Lyon | ||
| Renfe Class 112 EMU | Madrid – Alicante Madrid – Burgos Madrid – Cuenca – Valencia Madrid – Granada Madrid – Murcia Madrid – Ourense Alicante – Ourense Alicante – León Barcelona – Granada Barcelona – Sevilla Burgos – Valencia Málaga – Murcia León – Valencia | ||
| Alvia (mixed high-speed & conventional service) | Renfe Class 120 EMU | Madrid – Pamplona Madrid – Logroño Madrid – Irún/Hendaya Madrid – Bilbao Madrid – Salamanca Madrid – Santander Madrid – Huelva Barcelona – Bilbao Barcelona – San Sebastian Torre del Oro: Barcelona – Valencia – Sevilla – Cádiz | |
| Renfe Class 130 EMU | Madrid – Avilés Madrid – Cádiz Alicante – Gijón Alicante – Santander Barcelona – A Coruña Barcelona – Vigo Barcelona – Salamanca Euromed: Barcelona – Valencia – Alicante | ||
| Renfe Class 730 HMU | Madrid – Algeciras Madrid – Almeria Madrid – Ferrol Madrid – Vigo Madrid – Lugo Madrid – Badajoz |
| Service | Rolling stock | Image |
|---|---|---|
| AVE | Renfe Class 105 EMU |
| Service | Rolling stock | Quantity |
|---|---|---|
| Cercanías | Renfe Class 452 EMU | 152 |
| Renfe Class 453 EMU | 59 | |
| Renfe Class 412 and 413 EMU | 26 | |
| Renfe Class 402 EMU | 6 | |
| Media Distancia | Unknown Iberian Gauge CAF EMU | 28 |
| Renfe Class 714 BMU | 5 | |
| AVE | Renfe Class 106 EMU | 30 |
| Renfe Class 107 EMU | 13 |
Vehicles register numbers
All train types in Spain have special numbers to identify them. The first number tells you what kind of train it is:
- 1xx: High-speed trains that can carry many passengers quickly.
- 2xx: Electric locomotives that run on electricity.
- 3xx: Diesel locomotives that run on fuel.
- 4xx: Electric trains that have many cars connected together.
- 5xx: Diesel trains that have many cars connected together.
- 6xx: Hybrid locomotives that can use both electricity and fuel.
- 7xx: Hybrid trains that have many cars connected together.
- 8xx: Trams that can also travel on regular train tracks.
Tickets
Travel tickets are sold at train stations and online. In 2023, the European Commission started looking into whether Renfe was not playing fair in the online ticket selling world. They were worried Renfe wasn’t sharing important travel time details with other ticket websites. To fix this, Renfe made some promises, and in January 2024, these promises became official rules under the EU’s competition laws.
Images
Related articles
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