France Orders 2,000 Trains Too Wide for Station PlatformsTalk about being on the wrong side of the tracks. While we all make mistakes, France's latest eye-popping mishap should serve as a lesson in vigilance.

ByGeoff Weiss

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

你怎么说“史诗般的失败在法国吗?

The SNCF,France's national railway company, announced a baffling -- and costly -- oversight yesterday: it had ordered 2,000 trains for regional transport that turned out to be too wide for station platforms.

The error was due to amiscommunicationbetween the SNCF, which operates the country's trains, and a separate government entity, the RFF, which maintains railway infrastructure, according to theBBC. While many regional platforms were built over 50 years ago, the RFF only measured stations constructed over the past 30 years.

Construction work to widen the roughly 1,000 station stops is already under way, and has thus far cost the country about $70 million. The trains themselves were purchased for $21 billion.

In response to the stunning derailment, even French government officials were letting off steam. Transport Minister Frederic Cuvillier called themishap"absurd. When you separate the rail operator from the train company," he told theBBC, "this is what happens."

Related:While Everyone Else Saw a Parasite, This Man Saw a Marketable Product

Wavy Line
Geoff Weiss

Former Staff Writer

Geoff Weiss is a former staff writer at Entrepreneur.com.

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