The speed will be reduced from 105 km per hour at which the trains ran for over a year, raising questions yet again on the construction of the corridor which is the first public- private-partnership Metro project in India.
There was no word on when the line would open. An 18-20 minute journey from Connaught Place to the Terminal 3 of IGI Airport will hitherto take at least 30 to 35 minutes, effectively failing the purpose of a high-speed corridor.
After a two-day inspection on Tuesday and Wednesday, CMRS R K Kardam gave the much-awaited nod this evening in a letter sent to the Delhi Metro and Reliance Infrastructure for resumption of services on the 23-km high-speed line.
However, he drastically reduced the speed of trains on the corridor to 50 km per hour from the 105 km per hour formula on which trains were run before the Line was shut down on July 8, 2012. Originally, the Delhi Metro and Reliance Infra promised a speed of 120 km per hour.
The reduction of speed comes a big blow for both Delhi Metro and Reliance Infra which have been claiming that trains can be run at a maximum of 120 km per hour.
The corridor was shut after Reliance Infra complained to the Delhi Metro that cracks have been noticed on civil structures of the corridor. Delhi Metro completed the civil structure and handed it over to Reliance Infra for operations in 2010.
Problems were also noticed in the clippings used in the underground section of the corridor. Reliance Infra refused to comment on the development.