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June 18, 2014

International & UK Railway News Wednesday 18th June 2014

 Total Railway News

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UK Government Press releases feature the Memorandum of Understanding with China, and HS2: building and backing British business.....


Siemens and Mitsubishi go on the charm offensive......Siemens suggests that with Alstom they would make a truly leading global player.....


And in the USA, positive sounds regarding California High Speed Rail....


Click on the links for the full stories....












Headlines


(UK)House Rules: property law and Crossrail 2.(FT.com)


Places & Spaces Exhibition: urban realm and development on the Crossrail route - Crossrail.


(UK) Balfour Beatty awarded £16 million Crossrail substation contract  (EuropeanRailwayReview)


(UK)China signs £14bn trade deals with UK amid Premier's visit.(BBC News)


(UK)China invests in British projects during trade trip.(BBC News)


(UK) China wins stake in British nuclear power and high-speed rail.(The Guardian)


(UK)Stop HS2 response to potential Chinese investment in HS2..(StopHS2)






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GOV.UK.


HS2: building and backing British business
Department for Transport, The Rt Hon Patrick McLoughlin MP and High Speed Two (HS2) Limited


How the government is backing British business and enterprise with better infrastructure, including High Speed 2, and lower taxes.


Good morning.
I’m delighted to have been invited to the Institute of Directors this morning (18 June 2014).
You might have noticed that the World Cup has started.
We are just a short distance from where the foundations of the global game were laid. The FA was formed in 1863.
At the time British entrepreneurs and engineers crossed the world. Building railways and bringing the beautiful game wherever they went.
For decades, England and Scotland, were the preeminent footballing nations. But the FA’s focus was on its own committees not keeping up with the competition.
Instead of investing in training coaches and improving pitches we relied on the legacy that had been left by previous generations.
So when the time came to compete on the global stage in 1950 we fell at the first hurdle.
I’m sure you can see what I mean.
To compete internationally, we can’t rest on our laurels, we need to keep innovating and pushing forward.
And we need to invest in the infrastructure that’s needed for that to happen.

Long Term Economic Plan

Thanks to our long term economic plan the economy is recovering from the years of borrowing beyond our means.
Our growth rate has been the fastest in the G7 over the last year.
You have created a record number of jobs.
And we are on course to cut the huge deficit we inherited by half.
But as the tide of the financial crisis recedes the sands of the global economy have shifted.
Brazil, Russia, India and China more than tripled their share of world trade over the first decade of this century. While the European Union’s declined by around 10% over the same period.
That rapid growth of emerging markets is set to continue. Over the next two decades, the global middle class is expected to expand by another 3 billion.
I believe that presents a fantastic opportunity. Britain has enormous entrepreneurial spirit and energy. And I think British businesses can compete in those new markets.
Just yesterday we signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Chinese to promote further co-operation on rail projects in both countries.
This will ensure British firms have a fair opportunity to compete for business in the massive development of High Speed Rail in China.
To help you succeed, we need a competitive domestic business environment.
First, we need lower taxes and to cut unnecessary regulation. That’s why we have already cut corporation tax from 28% to 21%.
And from next year it will be just 20% - the joint lowest in the G20.

Building better infrastructure

The second thing we need to do is improve Britain’s essential transport infrastructure.
Two-thirds of IoD) members say that transport is poor value for money.
That is the result of years of short term thinking.
Investment was lower than in 1998 in every year until 2011.
So it is no surprise that our roads and railways are among the most congested in Europe.
That’s why we are prioritising improving our national infrastructure.
In total, £24 billion will be invested in the strategic road network in this Parliament and the next. That’s enough to resurface 80% of the strategic road network. And by 2021 we will be spending £3 billion each year on improvements and maintenance.
This is the most significant upgrade of our roads ever.
We have also reformed the CAA to deliver better airport facilities and cut costs.
We are improving land access to our airports - including major investments at Gatwick and Manchester.
And we have established the independent Airports Commission to look at what capacity is required in the south-east over the short, medium and long term.
The Office of Rail Regulation confirmed recently that more passengers are using our railways that at any point in history.
That’s why we will also be investing £38 billion to improve and expand our railways.
Improvements include an extra 140,000 seats on peak services by the end of the decade, a major electrification programme, Crossrail, Thameslink, the Northern Hub and a multi-billion pound deal to replace intercity rolling stock.
But even that investment will not be sufficient to meet the projected demand.
That is why we need High Speed 2.

HS2

HS2 will be the first north-south railway for a century.
It will be the most significant upgrade in the links between London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds since the construction of the motorways and it will return over £2 worth of benefit for every £1 invested.
As I travel around the country, people’s questions about HS2 fall into three broad areas.
The first is whether it is actually needed.
The second is whether HS2 will simply suck more economic activity into London and the South East.
And the third is whether, when budgets are tight, we can afford to build it.
Let me take each in turn.
Everyone agrees that Britain’s railways are reaching capacity but people quite rightly ask whether the money we are spending on HS2 would be better spent elsewhere.
The first thing to remember is, as I have said, we will be spending £38 billion upgrading Britain’s railways over the next 5 years.
So this isn’t an either or question.
But even that record investment will not provide the capacity needed.
The West Coast mainline is one of the busiest stretches of mixed use railway in the world.
We’ve spent £9 billion upgrading it over recent years. But it still twists and turns too much to be efficient because it was never a dedicated north-south railway. It was the result of stitching together a patchwork of Victorian tracks in the 1920s. And as well as high speed intercity services, it carries stopping commuter services and huge amounts of slow moving freight.
That’s why even on moderate forecasts it will be full by the mid-2020s.
Adding further capacity would be difficult, expensive and result in years of disruption. So instead of spending more money upgrading the existing railway and getting diminishing returns, we are better off building a new dedicated north-south link.
As well as faster, more frequent high speed connections between our major cities, HS2 also frees up the existing railway for new uses.
We can run far more commuter services to fast growing towns like Milton Keynes or between Birmingham and the Trent Valley.
It means we can run more services across the Pennines.
It means that towns that don’t currently have direct links could do so with the capital.
And it means we can carry much more freight than is possible today.
The next question I’m asked is whether building HS2 instead of helping rebalance the economy will simply increase the dominance of London and the South-East.
It was William Cobbett who first described London as the Great Wen in the 1820s. Some still see the capital as a scar on the landscape.
I don’t.
We’re lucky London is one of the true global cities. McKinsey estimate that, by 2025, London will be one of the four largest city economies in the world.
So while some argue we need to restrict London’s growth to rebalance the economy between north and south, I think that would be a grave error.
When we talk about rebalancing the economy the aim shouldn’t be to make London and the South East worse off.
It should be to harness the potential of London as a motor for Britain’s economy. At the moment businesses locate in the capital because they want to be closer to their competitors and markets. That supports a thriving economy. But it also means that London and the south east are also increasingly full up. They are caught in a circle of rising house prices, some of the most expensive commercial rents in the world and transport congestion.
Transport infrastructure is among the most important things overseas business leaders look for when deciding where to invest. Great cities like Birmingham, Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds, Liverpool want to grow. So we can help by improving their connections with the capital and, perhaps more importantly, their connections with one another.
Finally, there is the question as to whether HS2 is affordable. Taxpayers want to know that we will be spending their money wisely.
Over two decades, the cost of HS2 works out at around £2 billion a year - around the same amount we are spending on Crossrail.
Crossrail is already demonstrating that we can build major infrastructure on time and on budget.
Thanks to Sir David Higgins’ leadership, I am confident the same will be true of HS2.
David has made clear that the best way to help him do so is to reduce any remaining uncertainty surrounding the project. That is why I am pleased there was a consensus on all sides of the House at Second Reading and we are on track for the Bill to be in Committee shortly.
So to sum up, I think we have a choice to make.
Our economy is growing again. But the world we live in is changing.
We could choose gentle, but steady, relative decline.
Or we can have the confidence to go for growth.
Personally, I am an optimist.
Britain has the incredible ideas, entrepreneurs and engineers and the world class businesses we need to compete.
We want to back you by providing the infrastructure you need.
That includes HS2.
I look forward to working with you to help that to happen.
Thank you for listening.


UK and China sign Memorandum of Understanding on rail
DfT, Patrick McLouglin


Memorandum of Understanding will pave the way for closer co-operation on rail design and construction
Prime Minister David Cameron and Chinese Premier Li Keqiang today (17 June 2014) agreed that the UK and Chinese rail industries will work together to boost economic growth, jobs and skills.
The two countries signed a bilateral agreement at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office (FCO), paving the way for closer co-operation on areas such as rail design, engineering, construction, supply, operation and maintenance.
Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin said:
I can see great mutual benefit to be gained from increased co-operation between the UK and China on rail. The railways are a massive success story in both countries and we can boast world class expertise across the sector.
The government’s long term economic plan is working, and Britain is on the rise. But the job is not done. The success stories of the future will be economies that invest in infrastructure and welcome overseas involvement and we want this partnership to be a win-win situation creating economic growth and jobs here and abroad, including in China.
The Memorandum of Understanding – which covers all modes of rail, including high speed - states the scope of the partnership may include:
  • the development of new build and upgrading rail infrastructure projects;
  • the supply of products and services to third markets;
  • collaboration on research and development within the rail sector;
  • station design;
  • equipment supply;
  • rail transport safety and evaluation; and
  • energy saving and environmental protection in rail.
The Transport Secretary signed the MoU on behalf of the UK Government with Xu Shaoshi, Chairman of the National Development and Reform Committee (NDRC), signing for the Chinese. The UK is open to international investment and welcomes suitable qualified companies from other countries, including China, to bid for projects in accordance with international and domestic procurement practices and laws.
Today’s agreement states that contracts won in the UK should utilise and build upon the UK supply chain.
The UK also expects to see greater emphasis on access to the China market for UK companies.


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(France) Siemens says its bid for Alstom worth more than GE’s..video.(FT.com)


(Germany)Siemens and Alstom to discuss rail partnership.(Global Rail News)




(UK)Cairngorms funicular railway to be closed for a week of maintenance. (BBC News).


(UK) Protests over Thameslink rail franchise.(BBC News)


(UK)HS2 depot could cost Birmingham 7,000 jobs, claims MP.(Birmingham Post)


(UK) Options for closing Tallington crossing revealed.(Peterborough Telegraph)


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(UK Heritage)Wheels in motion for new loco project.(Northern Echo)


Latest News from the P2 project.....








(Video courtesy The P2 Steam Locomotive Company on YouTube) 






























UK Heritage


Trainspotting - share your stories and photographs(NRM)


Can you help us by sharing your stories and memories?
We're researching the trainspotting hobby which will be the focus of a season at the museum from September 2014 – March 2015. We have discovered that trainspotters have some great tales to tell. From adventure, travel and mischief to the anticipation and drama of waiting for trains, we would like find out more.(Click on the link above)


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(Ireland) Iarnród Éireann – A crisis to be overcome.(RailStaff)




(France) French rail strike enters second week with no sign of resolution.(France24)


Africa
Railways Africa.


SA NEGLECTS ITS ONLY GROWTH INDUSTRY
TRANSNET ADJUSTS LABOUR ARRANGEMENTS
ROAD-TO-RAIL MIGRATION IS VITAL
ASSISTING TRANSNET SUPPLIERS
CONCESSIONING SOUTH AFRICAN BRANCH LINES
KLEIN DRAKENSBERG XPLORER 2014


More on these stories   HERE


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(India) Railways await PM's nod for fare hike (Zee News)




Feature Article:


The ECO friendly transportation revolution: Bombardier OMNEO.








(railwaysignalling.eu)


Sustainability is the key word of this train with the Bombardier's ECO4 technologies. Today the ECO4 portfolio includes 15 energy-saving solutions that serve as the backbone of modern fleet management and rail technology.






USA
USHSR   



BILLIONS FOR CALIFORNIA HSR!
California moving forward with high speed rail! Deal Reached - Carbon Fees to Fund HSR
   
Deal reached on permanent funding source for the state's visionary bullet train as Gov. Jerry Brown and lawmakers agree on a compromise in proposed budget involving funding for the state's new high speed rail project.

California's bullet train would receive hundreds of millions of dollars in the coming year under a budget deal reached by Gov. Jerry Brown and lawmakers Thursday, a critical step toward beginning construction as the project continues to face legal and political challenges.

The agreement is one of several reached as the spending plan continued to take shape ahead of Sunday's deadline. Democratic lawmakers successfully fought the governor's proposal to cap how many hours caregivers could work in the state
home care program, but they were unable to secure extra money for court operations or increase payments to doctors who serve poor patients enrolled in government healthcare.

Bullet train funding had been a sticking point in budget negotiations. The money would be drawn from the cap-and-trade program, which charges fees to polluters who emit greenhouse gases above certain limits. Under the budget deal, $250 million would be allocated to high-speed rail in the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. In each following year, the bullet train would receive 25% of
cap-and-trade revenue.

The final figures represent a compromise between Brown, who wanted 33% for the
train, and Democratic lawmakers, who offered 15%. Cap-and-trade could provide billions of dollars for the bullet train over the next several years, a relatively small chunk of the project's overall $68-billion price tag. However, the money would arrive at a critical time. Voter-approved bond funding has been stalled by lawsuits, and the state needs to begin matching federal grants with its own dollars next month.

H.D. Palmer, spokesman for Brown's Department of Finance, said the governor is
pleased that the budget includes "an ongoing source of funding to move this
project forward." The cap-and-trade program provides the "single largest new source of capital into our budget," said Assemblyman Richard Bloom (D-Santa Monica), and the money is required by law to be spent on programs that reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

"We congratulate the California State Legislature and Governor Brown for once again being the visionary leaders of America!" said Andy Kunz, USHSR President. "California is leading the nation in creative funding, solving climate change, and building the 21st century transportation system - all simultaneously. That's visionary leadership at its best!"

Apart from the 25% earmarked for high-speed rail, the budget deal would direct
35% of cap-and-trade funds to other transit projects and affordable housing. The
rest of the money would be available for initiatives involving natural resources, energy efficiency and cleaner forms of transportation.

Sunday the California Legislature approved a $156.4-billion state budget, capping a week of intense negotiations over education, social services and environmental policies. The spending plan -- which includes a $108-billion general fund, $7.3 billion larger than last year -- is scheduled to take effect July 1
More info


  • APTA recognizes transit-rail agencies for 'excellence' in safety, security
  • CSCMP report: Rail helped the logistics industry grow incrementally in 2013
  • Connecticut creates port authority; Rep. Cassidy criticizes TIGER grant program
  • HART finishes first 100 support columns for Honolulu rail system
  • UP tweaks West Coast-Chicago intermodal services, wins Lowe's top rail award
  • Amtrak starts field testing first of four new passenger-car types
  • L.A.-area ports pumped up volumes in May
  • Rail supplier news from AECOM, Kinkisharyo, Alstom, UNITRAC, Keolis; and, in memoriam: Anthony Kruglinski


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