Deficit 83 Lines
{{Short description|Japanese movement to abolish deficit railway lines in 1968}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2024}}
{{Context|date=May 2024}}
Deficit 83 Lines (赤字83線, Akaji-Hachijyusansen) is a list of railway lines owned by Japanese National Railways (JNR) proposed for abolishment or transferring to third sector companies as it has fulfilled its goals in 1968.{{Cite journal |date=20 January 1985 |title=国鉄の地方線問題の経緯 と将来動向 |trans-title=History and future trends of JNR's local line issue |url=https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jscej1984/1985/353/1985_353_1/_pdf/-char/ja |journal=Proceedings of the Japan Society of Civil Engineers |language=ja |volume=1985 |issue=353 |pages=1–10 |doi=10.2208/jscej.1985.1 |via=J-STAGE}}{{Cite web |title=赤字ローカル線問題 JRの経営開示に戸惑う行政側の盲点について(鳥塚亮) - エキスパート |url=https://news.yahoo.co.jp/expert/articles/abdfb0fb70a9fef7ae6dd13699f829d0c0e07182 |access-date=2024-01-19 |website=Yahoo!ニュース |language=ja}}
Criteria
The criteria for a railway line being listed are the following:{{Cite web |title=国鉄(JR)線廃線 |url=http://park7.wakwak.com/~oya-p/jnr.html |access-date=2024-01-21 |website=park7.wakwak.com}}
- The length of the track is under 100 kilometers, and the function seen from the line is small, and there is a small population along the tracks.
- The one-way transportation volume of regular customers is less than 3,000 people, and the daily departure and arrival of cargo is within 600 tons.
- The transportation volume growth is lower than that of competing transportation institutions, and both passengers and cargo are decreasing.
The idea to close lines and replace them with bus services that cost less to operate was formulated as early as 1968.{{Sfn|Imashiro|Ishikawa|1998|p=62}}
By these criteria, 83 railway lines of {{Convert|2590|km|mi|abbr=on}} in length have been listed, and the JNR began talks with the local municipalities to close the lines. However, due to furious protests from the local residents, out of the 83 lines, before 1972 only 11 of those listed were closed, i.e. {{Convert|116|km|mi|abbr=on}}.{{Cite journal |date=20 January 1985 |title=国鉄の地方線問題の経緯 と将来動向 |trans-title=History and future trends of JNR's local line issue |url=https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jscej1984/1985/353/1985_353_1/_pdf/-char/ja |journal=Proceedings of the Japan Society of Civil Engineers |language=ja |volume=1985 |issue=353 |pages=1–10 |doi=10.2208/jscej.1985.1 |url-access= |access-date=25 January 2024 |via=J-STAGE}}{{Sfn|Imashiro|Ishikawa|1998|p=62}}
However, the Japan Railway Construction Public Corporation continued to build local lines, and most of the 11 lines opened during the talks were generating negative income, resulting in no improvements from the closure of the 11 lines.
In 1972, when Kakuei Tanaka became the prime minister, all efforts to close the remaining
lines were cancelled.{{Cite web |date=2012-08-22 |title=赤字83線とは (アカジハチジュウサンセンとは) [単語記事] |url=https://dic.nicovideo.jp/id/4949804 |access-date=2024-01-21 |website=ニコニコ大百科 |language=ja}} However, most of the lines that continued service after being listed as 83 deficit lines were abolished by Specified local lines movement.{{Cite web |title=国鉄があった時代 |url=http://ifs.nog.cc/blackcat-kat.hp.infoseek.co.jp/localline/akaji_83.html |access-date=2024-01-18 |website=ifs.nog.cc}}
Aftermath of all 83 lines
=Lines that were closed as a part of deficit 83 lines movement=
class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:100%;" |
style="width:10em"|Name of the line
!style="width:5em"|Prefecture !style="width:12em" class="unsortable"|Sections !style="width:4em"|Operational !style="width:10em"|Date of abolishment !class="unsortable"|Notes |
---|
Kōbukuro Line
|rowspan=2|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"|7.6 km |rowspan=2|8 December 1969{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=763}} | After the abolition, Nishitetsu Bus, including the following branch lines, took over, but it was split into Kaho Kotsu (now Nishitetsu Bus Chikuho) on 3 April 1988. |
Kōbukuro Line (Cargo branch)
|style="text-align:right;"|2.5 km |The 1.6 km section between Kōbukuro and Kawazu signal station is a duplicate section with the main line. |
Konpoku Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|12.8 km |1 December 1970{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=925}} |Transferred to Shari bus Koshikawa Line. |
Karatsu Line (Kishitake Branch)
|Saga |style="text-align:right;"|4.1 km |20 August 1971{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=722}} |Main line continued operations. Line transferred to Showa bus. |
Sechibaru Line
|Nagasaki |style="text-align:right;"|6.7 km |26 December 1971{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=735}} | Turned into a cycling road. Transferred to Saihi Bus Sechibaru Line. |
Usunoura Line
|Nagasaki |style="text-align:right;"|3.8 km |26 December 1971{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=735}} | Transferred to Saihi bus. |
Kajiyabara Line
|Tokushima |Itano - Kajiyabara |style="text-align:right;"|6.9 km |16 January 1972{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=651}} |JNR bus (later JR Shikoku bus) converted to Awa Line. Alternative transportation on the former Kajiyahara Line section will be integrated with the competing Tokushima Bus Kajiyahara Line. |
Sasanoyama Line
|Hyogo |style="text-align:right;"|17.6 km |1 March 1972{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=129}} |Converted to JNR Bus (later West Japan JR Bus) Sono Shino Line. |
Mikuni Line
|rowspan=3|Fukui |style="text-align:right;"|4.5 km |rowspan=3|1 March 1972{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=150}} |rowspan=2|Transferred to JNR bus Kanazu Mikuni Line. |
rowspan=2|Mikuni Line (Partial)
|Awaraonsen - Mikuni |style="text-align:right;"|4.2 km |
Mikuni - Mikuni-Minato
|style="text-align:right;"|1.0 km |Interged into the Keifuku Electric Railroad Mikuni Awara Line (current Echizen Railway Mikuni Awara Line). |
Ujina Line
|Hiroshima |style="text-align:right;"|2.4 km |1 April 1972{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=277}} |Even after the abolition date, it was operated once a day as a JNR side line of the Ujina Four-Party Agreement Line, but it was abolished in 1986. |
Kawamata Line
|Fukushima |Matsukawa - Iwashiro-Kawamata |style="text-align:right;"|12.2 km |14 May 1972{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=472}} |Converted to JNR Bus (later JR Bus Tohoku) Kawamata Line. |
Sasshō Line (Partial)
|Hokkaido |Shin-Totsukawa - Ishikari-Numata |style="text-align:right;"|34.9 km |Transferred to JNR bus (later JR Hokkaido Bus Company) Ishikari Line. |
Hososhima Line
|Miyazaki |style="text-align:right;"|3.5 km |1 February 1972{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=763}} |Passenger service abolished on the mentioned date. |
=Lines that continued service after the movement, but were abolished in later movements=
class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:100%;" |
style="width:10em"|Name of the Line
!style="width:5em"|Prefecture !style="width:12em" class="unsortable"|Section !style="width:4em"|Operational length (km) !style="width:10em"|Date of abolishment !class="unsortable"|Notes |
---|
rowspan="2"|Kesennuma Line
|rowspan="2"|Miyagi |Minami-Kesennuma - Kesennumakō |style="text-align:right;"|1.6 km |1 November 1979 |Cargo branch{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=484}} |
Kesennuma - Motoyoshi
|style="text-align:right;"|21.3 km |1 April 2020 |Yanaizu - Motoyoshi 34.0 km extension opened December 11, 1977. Incorporated Yanaizu Line, 17.5 km between Maeyachi and Yanaizu. |
Shiranuka Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|25.2 km |23 October 1983 |Kami-Charo - Hokushin 7.9 km extension opened 8 September 1972.{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=895}} |
Nicyū Line
|Fukushima |style="text-align:right;"|11.6 km |1 April 1984{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=526}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Aizu Bus. |
Akatani Line
|Niigata |style="text-align:right;"|18.9 km |1 April 1984{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=566}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Niigata Kotsu. |
Uonuma Line
|Niigata |style="text-align:right;"|12.6 km |1 April 1984{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=600}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Echigo Kotsu. |
Kuroishi Line
|Aomori |style="text-align:right;"|6.6 km |1 November 1984{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=556}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Kōnan Railway. |
Tsuma Line
|Miyazaki |style="text-align:right;"|19.3 km |1 December 1984{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=772}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Miyazaki Kotsu. |
Miyanoharu Line
|Ōita |Era - Higo-Okuni |style="text-align:right;"|26.6 km |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Oita Transportation Bus. |
Komatsushima Line
|Tokushima |style="text-align:right;"|1.9 km |14 March 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=662–664}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. |
Aioi Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|36.8 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=921}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. |
Shokotsu Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|34.3 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=914}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Hokumon Bus. |
Yahiko Line (Partial)
|Niigata |Higashi-Sanjō - Echigō-Nagasawa |style="text-align:right;"|7.9 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=602}} |Transferred to Echigo Kotsu. |
Hōjō Line
|Hyogo |style="text-align:right;"|13.8 km |1 April 1985 |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Hōjō Railways. |
Miki Line
|Hyogo |style="text-align:right;"|6.8 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=243}} |Later Listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Miki Railway Miki Line. |
Kurayoshi Line
|Tottori |style="text-align:right;"|20.0 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=327}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. |
Katsuki Line
|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"| 3.5 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=790–791}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Converted to Nishitetsu Bus (currently Nishitetsu Bus Kitakyushu). |
Katsuta Line
|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"|13.8 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=698–699}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Nishitetsu Bus. |
Soeda Line
|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"|12.1 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=768–769}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Seitetsu Bus Chikuho. |
Muroki Line
|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"|11.2 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=693–694}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished, transferred to Nishitetsu Bus. Bus service abolished 1996. |
Yabe Line
|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"|19.7 km |1 April 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=700}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Horikawa Bus. |
Iwanai Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|14.9 km |1 July 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=845}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Nisseki Bus. |
Kōhin-Hoku Line
|Hokkaido |Hama-Tombetsu - Kitami-Esashi |style="text-align:right;"|30.4 km |1 July 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=908}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Soya Bus. |
Ōhata Line
|Aomori |style="text-align:right;"|18.0 km |1 July 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=510–511}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Shimokita Kotsu Ōhata Line. |
Kōhin-nan Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|19.9 km |15 July 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=913}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Hokumon Bus. |
Bikō Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|21.2 km |17 September 1985{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=904}} |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and abolished. Transferred to Meishi Bus. |
Yashima Line
|Akita |style="text-align:right;"|23.0 km |1 October 1985 |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Yuri Kōgen Railway Chōkai Sanroku Line. |
Akechi Line
|Gifu |style="text-align:right;"|25.2 km |16 November 1985 |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Akechi Railroad Akechi Line. |
Uchiko Line (Partial)
|Ehime |style="text-align:right;"|5.0 km |3 March 1986 |Rest of the line continues operation as listed below. |
Takamori Line
|Kumamoto |style="text-align:right;"|17.7 km |1 April 1986 |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and transferred to Minamiaso Railway Takamori Line. |
Tominai Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|83.0 km |1 November 1986{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=865}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Donan Bus. |
Aniai Line
|Akita |style="text-align:right;"|46.1 km |1 November 1986 |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and transferred to Akita Nairiku Railways Akita Nairiku North Line. Incorporated Akita Nairiku South Line and renamed to Akita Nairiku Line on the same date.{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=555}} |
Etsumi-Nan Line
|Gifu |style="text-align:right;"|72.2 km |11 December 1986 |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and transferred to Nagaragawa Railway Etsumi-Nan Line. |
Miyanojyō Line
|Kagoshima |style="text-align:right;"|66.1 km |10 January 1987{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=706–708}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Nangoku Kotsu Bus. |
Furue Line
|Kagoshima |style="text-align:right;"|64.8 km |14 March 1987{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=778–779}} |33.5 km extension between Kaigataonsen - Kokubu opened 9 September 1972. Renamed to Ōsumi Line. |
Senata Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|48.4 km |16 March 1987{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=830}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Hakodate Bus. |
Yūmō Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|89.8 km |20 March 1987{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=915}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Abashiri Bus. |
Saga Line
|Saga |style="text-align:right;"|24.1 km |28 March 1987{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=718}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. |
Shigaraki Line
|Shiga |style="text-align:right;"|14.8 km |13 July 1987 |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Shigaraki Kohgen Railway. |
Aizu Line (Partial)
|Fukushima |Nishi-Wakamatsu - Aizukōgen-Ozeguchi |style="text-align:right;"|57.4 km |16 July 1987 |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and transferred to Aizu Railway Aizu Line. |
Gannichi Line
|Yamaguchi |style="text-align:right;"|32.7 km |25 July 1987 |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and transferred to Nishikigawa Seiryū Line. |
Wakasa Line
|Tottori |style="text-align:right;"|19.2 km |14 October 1987 |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Wakasa Railway Wakasa Line. |
Yamano Line
|Kumamoto |style="text-align:right;"|55.7 km |1 February 1988{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=704}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Nangoku Kotsu Bus. |
Kihara Line
|Chiba |style="text-align:right;"|26.9 km |24 March 1988 |Later listed as specified local lines (1st) and transferred to Isumi Railways Isumi Line. |
Noto Line
|Ishikawa |style="text-align:right;"|61.1 km |25 March 1988 |Later listed as specified local lines (3rd) and transferred to Noto Railway.{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=158}} Transferred to Hokutetsu Okunoto Bus. |
Nakamura Line
|Kochi |style="text-align:right;"|20.7 km |1 April 1988 |22.7 km extension between Tosa-Saga - Nakamura opened 1 October 1970. |
Mooka Line
|Ibaraki |style="text-align:right;"|42.0 km |11 April 1988 |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and transferred to Mooka Railways Mooka Line. |
Nagai Line
|Yamagata |style="text-align:right;"|30.6 km |25 October 1988 |Later listed as specified local lines (3rd) and transferred to Yamagata Railways Flower Nagai Line. |
Hinokage Line
|Miyazaki |style="text-align:right;"|37.6 km |28 April 1989 |12.5 km extension between Hinokage - Takachiho opened 22 July 1972.{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=772}} Renamed to Takachiho Line. |
rowspan="2"|Shibetsu Line
|rowspan="2"|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|69.4 km |rowspan="2"|30 April 1989{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=926–928}} |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Akan Bus. |
Nakashibetsu - Attoko
|style="text-align:right;"|47.5 km |Later listed as specified local lines (2nd) and abolished. Transferred to Nemuro Kotsu Bus. |
Yunomae Line
|Kumamoto |style="text-align:right;"|24.9 km |1 October 1989 |Later listed as specified local lines (3rd) and transferred to Kumagawa Railway Yunomae Line. |
Kajiya Line
|Hyogo |style="text-align:right;"|13.2 km |Later listed as specified local lines (3rd) and abolished. Transferred to Shinkai Bus. |
Taisha Line
|Shimane |style="text-align:right;"|7.5 km |1 April 1990{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=331}} |Later listed as specified local lines (3rd) and abolished. Transferred to Ichibata Bus. |
Shinmei Line
|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|121.8 km |4 September 1995{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=845}} |Transferred to JR Hokkaido Bus. |
Kabe Line (Partial)
|Hiroshima |style="text-align:right;"|32.0 km |14.2 km extension between Kake - Sandankyō opened 27 July 1969.{{Sfn|Ishino (I)|1998|p=282}} |
Iwaizumi Line
|Iwate |style="text-align:right;"|31.2 km |1 April 2014 |7.4 extension between Asanai - Iwaizumi opened 6 February 1972. Renamed to Iwaizumi Line. |
rowspan="2"|Esashi Line
|rowspan="2"|Hokkaido |style="text-align:right;"|42.1 km |12 May 2014 |Abolished before the opening of Hokkaido Shinkansen.{{Cite web |date=3 September 2012 |title=江差線(木古内・江差間)の鉄道事業廃止について |trans-title=Abolition of the Esashi Line (Kikonai-Esashi) |url=https://www.jrhokkaido.co.jp/press/2012/120903-3.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230421212031/https://www.jrhokkaido.co.jp/press/2012/120903-3.pdf |archive-date=21 April 2023 |access-date=26 January 2024 |website=jrhokkaido.co.jp |language=Japanese}} Transferred to Hakodate Bus. |
Kikonai - Goryōkaku
|style="text-align:right;"|37.8 km |26 March 2016 |Transferred to South Hokkaido Railway Company before the opening of Hokkaido Shinkansen.{{Cite web |title=会社概要・沿革 |trans-title=Company profile/history |url=https://www.shr-isaribi.jp/company/outline/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231215223219/https://www.shr-isaribi.jp/company/outline/ |archive-date=15 December 2023 |access-date=25 January 2023 |website=South Hokkaido Railway |language=ja}} |
Sankō-Hoku Line
|Shimane |style="text-align:right;"|50.1 km |1 April 2018 |26.9 km extension between Hamahara - Kuchiba opened 31 August 1975.{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=332–333}} Incorporated Sankō-Minami Line and renamed to Sankō Line on the same date. |
Sankō-Minami Line
|Hiroshima |style="text-align:right;"|28.4 km |1 April 2018 |Incorporated into Sankō-Hoku Line on 31 August 1975. |
=Lines that continue service=
class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:100%;" |
style="width:12em"|Name of the line
!style="width:10em"|Prefecture !style="width:12em" class="unsortable"|Section !style="width:4em"|Operational length (km) !class="unsortable"|Notes |
---|
Hachinohe Line (Partial)
|Aomori |style="text-align:right;"|53.1 km |After the opening of Tohoku Shinkansen, the line is isolated from other JR lines. |
Ōminato Line
|Aomori |style="text-align:right;"|58.4 km |Similar as above, but the line does not connect to the Tohoku Shinkansen unlike Hachinohe Line. |
Aizu Line (Partial)
|Fukushima |style="text-align:right;"|43.0 km |Continues operations as a part of Tadami Line. |
Tadami Line
|Niigata |Koide - Ōshirakawa |style="text-align:right;"|26.0 km |20.8 km extension between Tadami - Ōshirakawa opened 29 August 1971. Incorporated the section Aizu-Wakamatsu - Tadami of Aizu Line on the same date. |
Karasuyama Line
|Tochigi |style="text-align:right;"|20.4 km | |
Etsumi-Hoku Line
|Fukui |style="text-align:right;"|43.1 km |10.2 km extension between Kadohara and Kuzuryūko opened 15 December 1972. |
Meishō Line
|Mie |style="text-align:right;"|43.5 km |Listed for specified local lines (2nd) but were unlisted due to lack of roads to replace it. Section between Ieki - Ise-Okitsu suspended operations due to typhoon in 2009, but resumed service in 2016.{{Cite web |date=3 November 2023 |title=名松線、目的地は山の向こうに |url=https://www.nnn.co.jp/articles/-/172106 |url-access=subscription |access-date=26 January 2024 |website=Net Nihonkai |language=ja}} |
Sangū Line (Partial)
|Mie |style="text-align:right;"|14.1 km | |
Uwajima Line
|Kochi Ehime |style="text-align:right;"|33.6 km |42.7 km extension between Ekawasaki - Wakai opened 1 March 1974.{{Sfn|Ishino (II)|1998|p=646–647}} Renamed into Yodo Line and continues operation as it. |
Naruto Line
|Tokushima |style="text-align:right;"|8.3 km | |
Mugi Line (partial)
|Tokushima |style="text-align:right;"|43.3 km |11.6 km extension between Mugi and Kaifu opened 1 October 1973. 1.5 km section between Awa-Kainan abolished and transferred to Asa Coast Railway Company on 1 November 2020.{{Cite web |title=会社概要 |trans-title=Company Profile |url=https://asatetu.com/about/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211106063851/https://asatetu.com/about/ |archive-date=6 November 2021 |access-date=26 January 2024 |website=asatetu.com |language=ja}} |
Uchiko Line (Partial)
|Ehime |style="text-align:right;"|5.3 km |On 3 March 1986, the extension of the Yosan Main Line between Mukaihara and Uchiko and Shintani and Iyo-Ozu was incorporated into the short-circuit route, and other 4.1 km between Kitayama and Uchiko (Shin-Uchiko) was changed to a new route. Gōrō Station was abolished from Uchiko Line as a result. (Station remains as a station belonging to Yosan Line) |
Kashii Line (Partial)
|Fukuoka |style="text-align:right;"|14.1 km | |
Ibusuki Makurazaki Line (Partial)
|Kagoshima |style="text-align:right;"|37.9 km | |
Nichinan Line
|Miyazaki Kagoshima |style="text-align:right;"|89.0 km | |
See also
References
= Footnotes =
{{reflist}}
= Bibliography =
{{sfn whitelist |CITEREFIshino_(I)1998 |CITEREFIshino_(II)1998}}
- {{Teishajo|I|ref={{harvid|Ishino (I)|1998}}|}}
- {{Teishajo|II|ref={{harvid|Ishino (II)|1998}}|}}
- {{Cite book |last1=Imashiro |first1=Mitsuhide |title=The Privatization of Japanese National Railways |last2=Ishikawa |first2=Tatsujiro |date=1998 |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing Co. |isbn=9781780939278 |publication-date=2012}}