Spain's government defends rail investment record after deadly crashes


  • World
  • Thursday, 29 Jan 2026

Emergency personnel work next to one of the trains involved in the accident, near Adamuz, in Cordoba, Spain, January 19. REUTERS/Susana Vera

MADRID, Jan 29 (Reuters) - Spain's ‌transport minister said on Thursday his government had ramped ‌up spending in the railway network after years of ‌underinvestment as he faced a grilling from senators over a series of recent train accidents, one of which killed dozens.

A January 18 high-speed rail crash in ‍southern Spain killed 45 people while a ‍derailment two days later ‌in Catalonia killed a train driver, sparking political and public scrutiny ‍of ​rail safety, maintenance and infrastructure spending.

Oscar Puente, who was heckled by opposition lawmakers shouting "resign" when he walked up ⁠to the podium, said maintenance spending per kilometre ‌had risen 66% since 2017 and was now at or above the European ⁠average.

France invests ‍slightly more while Italy spends less, he said.

European Commission data and industry experts have questioned whether maintenance investment has kept pace with Spain's ‍expanding rail network and rising passenger ‌numbers, a view Puente rejected.

According to him, Spain had invested about 30 billion euros ($36 billion) less in rail infrastructure between 2010 and 2018 than it would have if pre-financial crisis spending levels had been maintained.

The conservative People's Party held power from 2011 to 2018, implementing across-the-board spending cuts amid the EU's push for austerity ‌while Spain faced a severe public debt crisis following a housing bubble bust.

Total annual rail investment has jumped to around 5 billion euros ($6 billion) in ​2025 from roughly 1.7 billion euros in 2017, said Puente, of the ruling Socialist Party.

($1 = 0.8376 euros)

(Reporting by Jesús Calero; Editing by David Latona)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In World

Mexico's Sheinbaum says she had productive call with Trump on trade
Historic Alexandria tramway prepares to shut ahead of contested overhaul
Swiss prosecutors widen fatal fire probe to local authorities, documents show
Afghanistan launches $100 million food security programme as crisis deepens
Cree Nation community in Quebec on lockdown after fatal shooting
Russia investigates care home deaths in new Siberian health scandal
UK and 23 other OSCE members launch probe into Georgia over rights concerns
Denmark's King Frederik to visit Greenland in February
Temperatures as low as minus 30C in Ukraine next week may damage crops
As violence surges, right-wing populist emerges as frontrunner in Costa Rica’s presidential election

Others Also Read