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Spain's government defends rail investment record after deadly crashes

Spain's Transport Minister said Thursday that his government has increased spending on?the rail network after years underinvestment. He was being grilled by senators about a series of recent train accidents. One of them killed dozens. A high-speed train crash on January 18 in southern Spain left 45 dead, while a derailment in Catalonia two days later killed a driver. This led to a public and political scrutiny of rail spending, safety and maintenance.

Oscar Puente was booed by opposition legislators shouting "resign", when he walked up to podium. He said that maintenance spending per km had increased 66% since 2017 and is now at or above European?average.

He said that France spends a little more while Italy spends a little less. Data from the European Commission and industry experts questioned whether investment in maintenance has kept up with Spain's growing rail network and increasing passenger numbers. Puente disagreed.

He said that Spain has invested about 30 billion euro ($36 billion) less between 2010 and 2018, than it would have had the spending levels pre-financial crises been maintained.

The conservative People's Party was in power between 2011 and 2018, cutting spending across the board amid a push by the EU for austerity, while Spain suffered a severe debt crisis after a housing bubble burst.

The total annual rail investment?has increased to approximately 5 billion euros ($6billion) by 2025, from around 1.7 billion euro in 2017, according to Puente of the ruling Socialist Party.

(source: Reuters)