CountryLink
CountryLink was a state government division dedicated to providing long-distance passenger rail and supplementary coach services across regional New South Wales, Australia, linking Sydney to inland and coastal destinations as well as interstate routes to Melbourne, Brisbane, and Canberra.[1][2] Operating as a business unit of the State Rail Authority, it focused on non-metropolitan travel, inheriting and managing diesel locomotive-hauled and self-propelled train fleets suited for rural and intercapital journeys.[3] The service emphasized connectivity for regional communities, employing rolling stock such as the XPT high-speed diesel trains for principal corridors and Xplorer diesel multiple units for branch lines, which facilitated travel to areas lacking electrified infrastructure.[4][5] Despite operational challenges including track conditions and competition from air and road transport, CountryLink maintained daily services that supported economic and social links in sparsely populated regions.[2] In July 2013, CountryLink's functions were restructured and integrated with Sydney's intercity rail operations to create NSW TrainLink, aiming to streamline regional public transport under a unified brand amid broader Transport for NSW reforms.[6] This transition marked the end of the CountryLink identity, though its core routes and much of its fleet persisted under the successor entity.[7]