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Grup Feroviar Român

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grup Feroviar Român
Company typePrivate
IndustryRail transport
Founded2001
HeadquartersBucharest
Key people
Gruia Stoica, CEO
ProductsRailway freight cars
Revenue €110 million (2009)
Number of employees
2,000 (2009)
Websitehttp://www.gfr.ro/

Grup Feroviar Român, or simply GFR, is the largest private railway company in Romania and one of the largest in South Eastern Europe. Founded in 2001, the company owns freight operations in Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Greece, Serbia, Ukraine, Moldova, Montenegro and Mozambique, and railcar production and maintenance operations in Romania, Hungary, Serbia and Ukraine. In 2010 GFR operated a park of over 13,500 railroad cars and 285 diesel and electric locomotives.

In 2013, GFR bought a 51% stake in CFR Marfă, which was the freight division of Căile Ferate Române. This purchase cost €202 million.[1]

Equipment

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Railroad cars

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Zaes class tank railway wagon of the Grup Feroviar Român
  • tank ( for gas, Diesel fuel-oil, black oil, raw oil);
  • tank ( liquid chemicals, etc.);
  • platform ;
  • open (Eacs, Eaos);
  • covered (series H);
  • specialized for coal (series F);
  • specialized for cereals transportation (series U);
  • specialized for the transport of bulk chemical fertilizers (series T);
  • specialized for the transport of assemblies (series Eakkmos).

Electric locomotives

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GFR class 40, number 803
Locomotive Class 60 of GFR, formerly ND2 of the China Railway

Diesel–electric locomotives (LDE)

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Diesel-hydraulic locomotives (LDH)

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Other

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In July 2007 GFR offered a bid for Hungarian company MÁV Cargo of around US$300 million and thus qualified for the final price offering for the company, from third place just behind Slovak company Speed Trans Consortium and a Cyprus based fund.
Control of Bulgarian Railway Company A.D. is shared by five Bulgarian companies and one Romanian company, Grup Feroviar Roman Bucharest.
The company also bought in 2006 the largest Serbian wagon construction and maintenance company, Zelvoz Smederevo.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "CFR Marfa sale agreement signed". Railway Gazette International. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 September 2013.
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