Newag S.A.
TypePublic (Spółka Akcyjna)
WSE: NWG
IndustryRailway rolling stock manufacturer
Founded1876
HeadquartersNowy Sącz, Poland
Key people
Zbigniew Konieczek (President and CEO)
Zbigniew Jakubas (Chairman of the supervisory board)
Products
  • locomotives
  • multiple units
  • trams
Revenue1,325,866,000 [1] (2020)
169,139,000 zł[1] (2020)
Number of employees
1,447[1] (2020)
Websitewww.newag.pl
Multiple unit ED78
Diesel Locomotive 16D

Newag S.A. (pronounced "nevag") is a Polish company, based in Nowy Sącz, specialising in the production, maintenance, and modernisation of railway rolling stock. The company's products include the 14WE, 19WE, 35WE types electric multiple units. The company has also developed the Nevelo prototype tram[2] and formed a consortium with Siemens Mobility for final assembly of Siemens Inspiro metro trains for the Warsaw Metro and Sofia Metro.

History

In 1876 (when Nowy Sącz belonged to Austria-Hungary), the Imperial-Royal Railway Workshops opened, serving the newly built Tarnów–Leluchów railway line. After the First World War and the establishment of the Second Polish Republic, the company, renamed "1st Class Main Workshop", was redirected to serve Polish State Railways (PKP), employing some 1,800 workers in 1922. In post-World War II communist Poland the workshop was nationalised and later became a separate, though still state-owned, enterprise officially called "Nowy Sacz Railway Rolling Stock Repairs Depot in Nowy Sacz, State Independent Enterprise" (Polish: Zakłady Naprawcze Taboru Kolejowego "Nowy Sącz" w Nowym Sączu, Przedsiębiorstwo Państwowe Wyodrębnione; ZNTK Nowy Sącz), with a workforce of about 3,500 in 1952. ZNTK Nowy Sącz serviced its last steam locomotive (a TKt48) in 1972.

After the fall of communism and the economic changes of 1989, ZNTK Nowy Sącz was transformed into a State Treasury Joint Stock Company, with the Polish state as the only shareholder. The company went through a period of financial turmoil around 2001 and its shares were acquired by a private domestic investor in 2003. The current name was adopted in 2005.

Current products

  • Nevelo – three-section low-floor tramcar, currently in service in Kraków
  • Impuls – electric multiple unit for urban, suburban or regional services
  • Vulcano – diesel multiple unit, currently in service in Italy
  • Griffin – four-axle electric or diesel-electric locomotive for express passenger and light-medium freight services
  • Dragon – six-axle high-power electric or diesel-electric locomotive for heavy freight services

Locomotives and EMU are available with optional last-mile diesel.

Production history

Own production
electric multiple units
14WE
Halny
19WE
 
31WE
Impuls
35WE
Impuls
36WE
Impuls
37WE
Impuls
39WE
 
45WE
Impuls
 
Inspiro
diesel multiple units
36WEhd
 
220M
 
221M
 
222M
 
226M
Vulcano
electric locomotives
E4MSU
Griffin
E4DCU-DP
Griffin
E6ACT
Dragon
E6DCF-DP
Dragon
trams
126N
Nevelo
Modernization
electric multiple units
EN57 EN71
electric locomotives
EU07
303Eb
EU07
303Ec
EP07P
303Eb
EP09
104Ec
EM10
405Em
3E-100
 
ET22
201El
ET22
201Ek
ET22
201Em
EL2
 
diesel locomotives
6Dg 6Dl 15D/16D 18D 311D

Test track

The company has set up an electrified, 245 metre long test track to test the electric rolling stock it manufactures or modernises. The overhead can be supplied with any of the four systems, commonly used on European railways: 1.5 and 3 kV DC, 15 kV 16.7 Hz and 25 kV 50 Hz.[3]

2023 revelation of software sabotage

In December 2023, software engineers from white hat hacker group Dragon Sector revealed that they had reverse engineered the embedded software of Newag 45WE Impuls EMUs after operator Koleje Dolnośląskie had experienced a number of mysterious breakdowns when maintenance was performed by their selected contractor Serwis Pojazdów Szynowych (SPS).[4] In Newag's opinion, the issues were a result of malpractice by SPS and the trains should have instead been serviced by Newag.[5][6]

Analysis of the software revealed that the train's embedded computers were programmed to lock up and display bogus fault messages and prevent the train from running if a GPS tracker detected that it spent a certain number of days in an independent repair company’s maintenance center, and also if certain replacement parts had a serial number not approved by the manufacturer.[7][8]

It was also discovered that the software locks could be bypassed by pressing a sequence of buttons in the cab of the train, although a later software update removed this ability.[9] The Dragon Sector group analysed 29 trains belonging to Koleje Dolnośląskie as well as other affected operators such as Koleje Mazowieckie, SKM Warszawa, WKD and Polregio, 24 of which had software locks which were removed using tools developed by the group. After those findings were made public, former Minister of Digital Affairs Janusz Cieszyński confirmed the Polish government had known since May.[10]

Newag strongly denied the claims they intentionally disabled their software and instead alleged SPS was propagating a conspiracy theory to avoid contractual penalties for being unable to service the trains. Newag also claimed there is no proof they are the author of the software or that the modifications had been introduced by them. Newag stated it would take legal action against SPS and the Dragon Sector group for slander and defamation.[11]

The Dragon Sector hacker group gave a presentation at the 37th Chaos Communication Congress (37C3) in Hamburg, where they explained in detail the process of debugging the train software and their findings.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Newag Annual Reports" (in Polish).
  2. "Newag tram rolls onto the streets of Kraków". Railway Gazette International. Retrieved 1 July 2013.
  3. "New test track at NEWAG". Newag. 26 November 2020.
  4. "O trzech takich, co zhakowali prawdziwy pociąg – a nawet 30 pociągów". Zaufana Trzecia Strona (in Polish). 2023-12-05. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
  5. "q3k :blobcatcoffee:: "I can finally reveal some rese…" - Warsaw Hackerspace Social Club".
  6. Belanger, Ashley (2023-12-13). "Trains were designed to break down after third-party repairs, hackers find". Ars Technica. Retrieved 2023-12-14.
  7. "Skandal na polskiej kolei. Hakerzy ujawniają, kto stoi za tajemniczymi awariami pociągów". Onet Wiadomości (in Polish). 2023-12-05. Retrieved 2023-12-05.
  8. Koebler, Jason (13 December 2023). "Polish Hackers Repaired Trains the Manufacturer Artificially Bricked. Now The Train Company Is Threatening Them". 404 Media. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  9. "q3k :blobcatcoffee:: "The key unlock was deleted in …" - Warsaw Hackerspace Social Club".
  10. "Wielki skandal na kolei. ABW i premier od miesięcy wiedzieli o aferze z pociągami Newagu". Onet Wiadomości (in Polish). 2023-12-19. Retrieved 2024-01-01.
  11. "Newag comes out fighting in claims over foul play". International Railway Journal. 2023-12-05. Retrieved 2023-12-08.
  12. Koebler, Jason (January 4, 2024). "Polish Hackers Say Manufacturer's Repair DRM Killed Train's Power, Broke Compressor". 404 Media. Retrieved January 4, 2024.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.