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・ Network packet
・ Network partition
・ Network performance
・ Network planning and design
・ Network Policy Server
・ Network probability matrix
・ Network Processing Forum
・ Network processor
・ Network Professional Association
・ Network programming
・ Network Project on Sheep Improvement
・ Network protector
・ Network Protocol Stack E6
・ Network Q RAC Rally (video game)
・ Network Q RAC Rally Championship
Network Rail
・ Network Rail Certification Body
・ Network Rail Control Periods
・ Network Rail Property
・ Network Rail Route 23 (North West Rural)
・ Network Rail Route 5 (West Anglia)
・ Network Rail Route 6 (North London Line and Thameside)
・ Network Rail Route 7 (Great Eastern)
・ Network Railcard
・ Network Records
・ Network redirector
・ Network resource planning
・ Network robustness
・ Network Route Utilisation Strategy
・ Network scheduler


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Network Rail : ウィキペディア英語版
Network Rail

|industry = European Rail Infrastructure Managers
|products = Public transport
|revenue = £6.2 billion (2013)
|owner = HM Government
|num_employees = 34,000
|homepage = (www.networkrail.co.uk )
}}
Network Rail is the owner (via its subsidiary Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd which was known as Railtrack plc before 2003〔http://wck2.companieshouse.gov.uk//wcframe?name=accessCompanyInfo Companies House Webcheck service - company No.02904587〕) and infrastructure manager of most of the rail network in England, Scotland and Wales,〔(Network Rail ) Retrieved 25 May 2009.〕
Network Rail is a 'not for dividend' company limited by guarantee with no shareholders which applies its income to its own purposes. The Secretary of State for Transport is a 'Special Member' 〔() Articles of Association - Network Rail Ltd. adopted on 29 Aug 2014〕 of the company's board of management and possesses additional powers over other members.
Network Rail's main customers are the separate and mostly private train operating companies (TOCs), responsible for passenger transport, and freight operating companies (FOCs), who provide train services on the infrastructure that the company owns and maintains.
Since 1 September 2014, Network Rail has been classified as a "public sector body".〔https://www.networkrail.co.uk/supplying-us/reclassification-as-a-public-sector-body/〕
==History==

Britain's railway system was built by private companies, but it was nationalised by the Transport Act 1947 and run by British Railways until re-privatisation in the 1990s. Infrastructure and passenger and freight services were separated at that time. Between 1994 and 2002 the infrastructure was owned and operated by Railtrack.
The Hatfield train crash on 17 October 2000 was a defining moment in the collapse of Railtrack. The immediate major repairs undertaken across the whole British rail network were estimated to have cost in the order of £580 million and Railtrack had no idea how many more 'Hatfields' were waiting to happen because it had lost considerable in-house engineering skill following the sale or closure of many of the engineering and maintenance functions of British Rail to external companies; nor did the company have any way of assessing the consequence of the speed restrictions it was ordering, which all but brought the railway network to a standstill. The costs of modernising the West Coast Main Line were also spiralling. In 2001, Railtrack announced that, despite making a pre-tax profits before exceptional expenses of £199m, the £733m of costs and compensation paid out over the Hatfield crash had plunged Railtrack from profit into a loss of £534m, and it approached the government for funding, which it then used to pay a £137m dividend to its shareholders in May 2001.
Network Rail Ltd. took over control by buying Railtrack plc, which was in "railway administration", from Railtrack Group plc for £500 million; Railtrack plc was then renamed and reconstituted as Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd. The purchase was completed on 3 October 2002. The former company had thus never ceased to exist but continued under another name: for this reason Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd was the defendant in later prosecutions in respect of events which had occurred in the days of Railtrack.
Following an initial period in which Network Rail established itself and demonstrated its competence in addressing the principal challenges of improving asset condition, reducing unit costs and tackling delay, the Government's Rail Review in 2004 White Paper said that Network Rail should be given responsibility for whole-industry performance reporting, timetable development, specification of small and medium network enhancements, and the delivery of route-specific utilisation strategies (RUS). Some of these are functions which Network Rail already had; others – such as the obligation to devise route utilisation strategies – were transferred to Network Rail from the Strategic Rail Authority, a non-departmental public body, part of the UK government. The SRA was abolished on 30 November 2006.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Strategic Rail Authority annual report and accounts period ended 30 November 2006 )
The company moved its headquarters to Kings Place, 90 York Way, from 40 Melton Street, Euston, on 26 August 2008. On 3 October 2008, Sir Ian McAllister announced that he would not stand for re-election as chairman of Network Rail. He had held the position for six years. He noted that as Network Rail moved to a "new phase in its development" it was appropriate for a new chairman to lead it there.
Many track safety initiatives have been introduced in the time Network Rail has been responsible for this area. The latest, announced in December 2008, known as "All Orange", states that all track personnel must not only wear orange hi-vis waistcoats or jackets, but must also wear orange hi-vis trousers at all times when working on or near the track.
This new safety ruling came into force on 1 January 2009 for maintenance and property workers and on 1 April 2009 for infrastructure and investment sites.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Track Safety=RailStaff )
In 2011 the company began the process of reorganising its operational structure into nine semi-autonomous regional entities, each with their own managing director; the first two units to be created were Scotland and Wessex regions. The re-organisation has been interpreted as a move back towards vertical integration of track and train operations.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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