Track Record

Spain’s railway crisis.
Track Record
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Commentary
Spain receives much well-deserved praise for its rail network, the second-largest in the world after China’s, with around 4,000 kilometers (2,485 miles) of high-speed track. Rail travel in the Iberian country now accounts for 56 percent of all travel, more than road and air combined, with high-speed services connecting over fifty Spanish cities. In 2009, then-US President Barack Obama credited the 470-kilometer (292-mile) line linking Madrid to the southern city of Seville—the country’s first high-speed service, opened in 1992—as one of the inspirations for creating a network of comparable efficiency across America.
Mark Nayler
Mark Nayler
Author
Mark Nayler is a freelance journalist based in Malaga, Spain, and writes regularly for The Spectator and Foreign Policy on politics and culture.
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