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Pune Varanasi Amrit Bharat Express Gets Railway Nod

A new Amrit Bharat Express will connect Hadapsar in Pune directly to Varanasi, offering pilgrims a faster, more comfortable alternative to the congested routes currently available. The Railway Ministry has also regularised the Pune–Jabalpur special train, converting it into a year-round service with lower fares and advance booking options — two decisions that collectively strengthen Pune’s rail connectivity to North and Central India.

The Amrit Bharat Express will depart from the Hadapsar terminal, a strategic choice that officials say will reduce congestion at the main Pune railway station. For a city with rapidly growing passenger volumes, distributing long-distance traffic across multiple terminals is not merely convenient — it is essential infrastructure management. Hadapsar has historically been an underutilised node; this train could change that. A senior official confirmed that the new service directly addresses a long-pending demand from passengers travelling to Kashi and Prayagraj, particularly senior citizens who needed a direct and comfortable connection. The train is expected to benefit not just pilgrims but also trade and employment corridors between Pune’s manufacturing economy and North India’s consumption markets.

The regularisation of the Pune–Jabalpur special train (now renumbered 20161/20162) carries a different but equally significant implication. Special trains typically command higher fares and operate on unpredictable schedules. Converting this service to a permanent, regular train means passengers can now book tickets throughout the year at standard rates. For students, migrant workers, and small-business travellers who move frequently between Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh, this translates to predictable travel costs and better planning. From an urban sustainability perspective, each long-distance train that replaces air travel or private vehicles reduces per-passenger carbon emissions substantially. Rail emits approximately one-seventh the carbon dioxide per passenger-kilometre compared to aviation. The Amrit Bharat Express, designed as a premium but affordable service, could shift a meaningful number of passengers from short-haul flights between Pune and North India — a corridor currently served by multiple daily flights.

Train timings are yet to be announced. Once operational, the services will be particularly valuable during upcoming holiday seasons when airfares surge and road travel becomes impractical. For Pune’s lakhs of North Indian residents and pilgrims, the approvals translate to one thing: a direct, affordable, and reliable rail link to the Ganga. For the city’s planners, it is a reminder that good rail connectivity is climate policy, not just transport policy.

Pune Varanasi Amrit Bharat Express Gets Railway Nod
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