On 4 January 2000, at 13:12, a southbound train from Trondheim and a northbound local from Hamar collided head-on at full speed in a slight curve outside Åsta, on the Røros Line. The impact ruptured the fuel tanks on both diesel trains, spilling 5,000 litres that ignited immediately. Nineteen people were killed.
The cause was systemic failure. The Røros Line was single-track with no automatic train control: nothing to physically stop a train from passing a red signal. There was no onboard radio either. The northbound train left Rudstad station at 13:07 despite the signal not showing green. By the time anyone realised, it was too late. The disaster led to major investment in train safety across Norway, including the installation of automatic train stop systems on lines that had been running on trust and manual signals for over a century.
The cause was systemic failure. The Røros Line was single-track with no automatic train control: nothing to physically stop a train from passing a red signal. There was no onboard radio either. The northbound train left Rudstad station at 13:07 despite the signal not showing green. By the time anyone realised, it was too late. The disaster led to major investment in train safety across Norway, including the installation of automatic train stop systems on lines that had been running on trust and manual signals for over a century.