Siemens, ThyssenKrupp to Dissolve Maglev Train Company
May 9, 2008The decision on Thursday, May 8, came after the city of Munich decided in March to abandon plans for a 37-kilometer (23-mile) line linking the city center with the airport.
Despite the dissolution of the company, "the core competencies of the Transrapid technology" would remain in the possession of Siemens and ThyssenKrupp, they said.
The companies said they remained dedicated to promoting the system and were continuing talks with possible customers in China and the United States.
In announcing their decision after a board meeting in Erlangen in the southern state of Bavaria, electrical engineering concern Siemens and steelmaker ThyssenKrupp said Transrapid's main office in Berlin would close on Oct. 1.
Employees seconded to Transrapid would return to the parent companies, they said.
Commercial service in China
The only Transrapid in commercial service operates in China along a 30-kilometer (19-mile) route between downtown Shanghai and the city's airport.
There is also a test track at Lathen in the Emsland region of northern Germany, where 23 people were killed in a September 2006 accident.
Magnetic-levitation systems use powerful magnets to glide the trains along a monorail without friction at speeds of up to 500 kilometers per hour.
Although the technology was first patented in the 1930s and serious attempts to realize its potential began four decades ago, the maglev train idea has to date failed to find a significant market.