The Railway Chronicle

The Railway Chronicle is brought to you by www.steamtu.be "Steam Tube" is not responsible for external /third party news items.

Their presence on here does not mean we condone/ agree with any sentiments expressed. Items are included purely for information purposes"

Please note: "Copyrights acknowledged. Please advise if unintentional infringement affects your rights"

October 28, 2014

International & UK Railway News Tuesday 28th October 2014


PhotoPhotoPhoto


Infrastructure investment....news today that China is to invest $169billion in the UK's infrastructure.
Both Scottish and Welsh governments see the advantages of rail investment for their business communities..
And this enthusiasm is also felt in Australia.....(see Anthony Albanese's speech....).. and in the USA.
Take a close look at Bombardier's Innovia Metro 300 for Riyadh Metro...
China's two major railway builders to merge?
Nigerian Railways prospects? Hopefully more than promises, promises.....
And take a trip from Moscow to Nice.....


Click on the links....




Headlines
UK
China to invest $169bn in UK infrastructure by 2025.(GCR)


Leader: Holyrood must adopt high speed rail plans.(The Scotsman)


High-speed rail investment will boost business in North Wales, says Welsh Secretary(Daily Post)


NetworkRail_New - News Releases - Network Rail and Merseyrail ready to tackle leaves on the line


Check Chiltern Trains timings into London Marylebone HERE


PhotoPhotoPhoto


Great Eastern rail investment 'fundamental' to East Anglia economy.(BBC News)


Stoke-on-Trent City Council 'to fight' for HS2 station.(BBC News)


Bolton MPs welcome "HS3" plans for the North West.(Bolton News)


International
Australia

Bring it on- Address to Australasian Railways Association High Speed Rail Forum(Anthony Albanese MP)



Ladies and gentleman,
Over the past six days the nation has seen an outpouring of tributes to the late, great Gough Whitlam.
If there has been a theme, it was Whitlam’s imagination for a better future for Australia and his courage in making his vision a reality.
Former US President John F Kennedy put the task of reformers this way: “Things do not happen. They are made to happen.’’
If ever there was an infrastructure project that required vision, if ever there was a project that required determined action to make it happen, it is High Speed Rail.
I’m pleased you are holding this forum today.
Its title – Bring it on – could not be more pertinent.
It’s a great opportunity to remind Australia that High Speed Rail is an economic game-changer for our nation.
A reminder that it will allow for travel between interstate capitals in as little as three hours.
A reminder that High Speed Rail would also turbo charge the economies of regional communities along its path.
High Speed Rail isn’t something we can leave to our children or our grandchildren to build.
We must begin now.
We must act to preserve the corridor and finalise the planning needed prior to construction.


VIABILITY
Nation builders anticipate and create the future.
We know some of what the future will bring.
Recent projections by the Australian Bureau of Statistics suggest our population will be about 50 million by 2060, including eight million people each in the cities of Sydney and Melbourne.
This of course will be reflected in the size of our cities, both in their footprints but also in terms of their density.
Sydney-to-Melbourne and Sydney-to-Brisbane are already in the top 10 busiest aviation routes in the world.
Given increasing aviation use, they will become even busier in the future.
Change is powerful and its effects can never be underestimated.
Bill Gates had this in mind a few years ago when he said: (and I quote):
We always overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next 10.
Don’t let yourself be lulled into inaction.
In that spirit I think we can assume that by 2060 Australians will on average fly much more frequently than they do today.
When I was a boy, airline travel was very expensive.
I was in my 20s before I took my first aircraft journey.
But in recent decades increasing disposable incomes and the emergence of low-cost carriers have boosted air travel.
Air travel is five times cheaper than it was 20 years ago.
A Department of Infrastructure and Regional Development research paper forecasting aviation movements to 2030 noted that continued passenger growth at major airports was already testing the capacity of airport infrastructure.
It said international air travel would grow strongly to 2030, with both domestic and international passenger movements through capital cities almost doubling.
And that’s just by 2030, not 2060.
A 2010 report by the Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics which examined movement through the nation’s capital city airports forecast growth of 4.2 per cent a year to 235 million by 2029-30.
These are facts that need to be seriously considered in the context of the viability of High Speed Rail.
We should also consider the possibility that in coming decades, growing incomes will open interstate travel to more Australians, which could lead to even more demand on our aviation sector.
Unless we want to build more airports all over the country, there’s a limit to the capacity of existing aviation infrastructure to cope.
Looking forward again to 2060, it’s unlikely that governments of the time will, like the current government, refuse to act on reducing carbon emissions.
I predict that by 2060, all governments will have established market-based mechanisms that will provide clear cost signals in favour of low-emissions technologies.
That puts High Speed Rail in the box seat.
It is far cleaner than aircraft travel.
It is more convenient.
And it is a better experience.
No-one who has ever been on the Eurostar fast train from London to Paris arrives wishing that they had travelled by air.


LABOR’S URBAN FOCUS
I’ve been pleased to address the Australasian Railways Association and other groups about my support for High Speed Rail on several occasions.
But since I last addressed you, Labor has sharpened our focus on High Speed Rail in terms of its contribution to cities policy.
Labor wants to put the productivity, sustainability and liveability of cities near the top of the national political agenda.
One of our aims is to ease the burden of traffic congestion in our capital cities, which has become so bad that many Australians live in drive-in, drive-out suburbs where they live but where there are no jobs.
This is leading to increasingly long daily trips to and from work.
One way to address this problem is to invest in urban rail to improve public transport.
Unfortunately, under the current Government, that won’t happen.
But another is to strengthen the economies of regional Australian cities and towns so they can take some of the development pressure off state capitals.
That’s where High Speed Rail comes in.
The line for this project would travel through the Gold Coast, Casino, Grafton, Coffs Harbour, Port Macquarie, Taree, Newcastle, the Central Coast, Southern Highlands, Wagga Wagga, Albury-Wodonga and Shepparton.
There’s also Canberra, Australia’s largest inland city.
Connecting these great regional cities to a high speed mass transit system would connect them to massive opportunities for economic development.
Think of the tourism potential.
Imagine the possibilities of being able to live in regional Australia and commute to a capital city on a daily basis.
Or imagine the potential for city-based businesses to establish themselves or divisions of their operations in these regional cities, taking advantage of lower costs in regional Australia while still being a short ride away from the nearest state capital.
Of course, our capital cities are always going to keep growing.
As the High Speed Rail Feasibility Stage II study produced last year noted, employment growth in the central business districts of our east coast capitals will double over the next 30 years.
It also noted there were limits to the capacity of public transport to cater to the extra demand.
The report continued (and I quote):
In that case, regional locations within two hours’ travel by HSR that have capacity for increases in business growth could assist in making the metropolitan centres more globally competitive by providing less-congested future growth options.
This could allow regional centres to serve as secondary locations for lower-cost back office functions and new start-up businesses requiring less frequent access to the major centres.’’
If we add to this factor the rising importance of digital communications and the possibilities it offers for working from home, it becomes clear High Speed Rail has a real value as a driver of regional economic development with beneficial spinoffs for capital cities.
High Speed Rail can help provide options for Australians who want more out of life than sitting in their cars for hours a day.
It can provide more options for businesspeople who understand the link between productivity and contented workers who live near their workplaces.
I notice that the ARA has today released a new report into the potential for High Speed Rail to boost regional development.
I’m pleased with this new contribution to the debate.
It’s an important contribution in the context of the pressure on Australian cities I discussed a moment ago.
The Aurecon report says experience across the world is that regional cities that have been linked to High Speed Rail have experienced accelerated economic development as a result.
It also notes that while the $114 billion cost estimate of this project in Australia was based on a delivery cost of $65 million per kilometre, similar projects in Europe, for example, have come in at less than half that cost.
Those figures certainly bear further investigation.
I’ve had a chance to read this report and I commend it to you.
I hope also that the current Government will take heed of its contents and act.


THE FAILURE OF IMAGINATION
Regrettably, under the current government, High Speed Rail is stalled.
In this year’s Budget, the Government scrapped $52 million in funding that was included in the 2013 Labor Government Budget to create a High Speed Rail Authority to progress the project and begin the process of securing the corridor.
The Authority was to bring together representatives of the state and territory jurisdictions with a stake in High Speed Rail along with experts including a representative of the ARA.
Participants were to work together to progress planning.
Critically, the authority was to start to acquire the corridor for the line before it is built out by urban sprawl.
Not only did the Government dump this plan, but it also sacked the High-Speed Rail Advisory Group, the committee which recommended the establishment of the authority.
That committee included former National Party leader Tim Fisher, Business Council of Australia head Jennifer Westacott, the chief executive of the Australasian Railway Association Brian Nye, as well as senior bureaucrats and independent experts.
This was a poor decision.
The group was in no way aligned with the former Labor Government.
It was made up of accomplished people who looked at the facts and recommended a way forward.
It did not advocate the immediate construction of High Speed Rail.
It simply proposed that we start planning and purchasing the corridor.
Now, even as I stand here speaking, people who own land that would be required for High Speed Rail could be planning, as is their right, to develop that land.
As we speak the states and territories along the route, as well as the many local councils involved, are not engaged in the co-operation that would be needed to deliver this project.
At the same time, international experts with experience in building High Speed Rail continue to visit our shores.
I know that the current Government says it supports High Speed Rail and I am grateful for that.
But you have to be disappointed with the lack of concrete progress.
I must say however, that I was pleased to see an article in today’s edition of The Australian in which businessman Maurice Newman, who chairs the Prime Minister’s Business Advisory Council, acknowledged the potential regional development impacts of High Speed Rail.
I can only say to Mr Newman that I strongly agree and I urge him to use the influence he has with the Government to secure genuine bi-partisan support for the project.
In August last year, the High Speed Rail Advisory Group I mentioned earlier warned that the greatest immediate threat to High Speed Rail in Australia was not cost, timing or technology.
It was inertia brought about by inaction.
Regrettably, the current Government is sitting on its hands as ill-informed critics tell the community the project is too expensive, too hard, too ambitious and too far off to warrant serious consideration.
Just like the conservatives who, in 1946, voted against the construction of the Snowy Mountains Scheme, our current decision makers seem unwilling to build for our nation’s future.
As the advisory group’s report warned (and I quote):
If we don’t take action to progress the project now, we may not get another chance.
This brings me back to the comment by John F Kennedy which I mentioned at the start of this speech.
“Things do not happen,’’ Kennedy said. “They are made to happen.’’
More specifically, Nation Building does not just happen. National Building is made to happen.
Today, we have a choice.
We can take modest steps now that begin the necessary planning for High Speed Rail, reducing future construction costs.
Or we can do nothing.
I’m for acting.
That is why nearly a year ago I proposed a Private Member’s Bill - the High Speed Rail Planning Authority Bill 2013 – designed to create the planning authority proposed by the High Speed Rail Advisory Group.
It was the first Private Member’s Bill moved in this Parliament.
It would create an 11 person high-speed rail authority to bring together all affected jurisdictions as well as rail and engineering experts to progress planning and, critically, focus on the corridor.
The 11 members of the board are outlined in the bill.
They would include:
  • One member from each of the states or territory affected—Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria and the Australian Capital Territory;
  • One member representing the Local Government Association;
  • One member nominated by the Australasian Railway Association; and
  • Five members appointed by the minister for infrastructure on the basis of qualifications or expertise.
The Bill proposes that the Authority’s roles would include consideration of land use planning relating to the corridor, safety, public consultation and measures to minimize environmental impact.
It was my hope that the Bill would provide an opportunity for the new Government to embrace High Speed Rail and put it beyond the reach of party politics.
That’s critical, because this is a project so big it will span the lives of many parliaments and, presumably, several prime ministers.
Regrettably, the Government has chosen not to bring this Bill on for debate.
So it’s just sitting on the notice paper, waiting.
The best thing that could happen on High Speed Rail is for a bi-partisan commitment, not just to support High Speed Rail, but to act now in concrete ways.
We need to legislate to create an authority to put the issue beyond party politics and beyond the life of one parliament or one government.
I’ve often said that my aim in creating Infrastructure Australia in 2008 was to disconnect the infrastructure delivery process, which is necessarily long-term, from the short-term political cycle.
That’s important for projects than take 10 years or so to conceive, plan, assess, fund and deliver.
It’s even more important for a project like High Speed Rail, which is similar in its scope to the Snowy River Scheme, which took 23 years to build.
The way forward is for all Australian political parties to embrace High Speed Rail and agree to act on the four key recommendations of the High Speed Rail Advisory Group.
Those recommendations were:
 Formally commit to high speed rail and settle arrangements with state and territory governments;
 Protect the corridor;
 Refer High Speed Rail to Infrastructure Australia for initial assessment;
 Establish a High Speed Rail Authority
Like any big project there will be naysayers.
There always are.
In 1949, the Minister for Public Works and Housing, Nelson Lemmon, faced critics of the Snowy River Scheme.
Lemmon said:
… those critics, in the main, will be people who have little faith.
This Government has faith in its engineers, its people and the future of Australia.”
So do I.
===================================================================


Canada
Transportation Safety Board of Canada.

News release

Data review identifies discrepancies: TSB reminds railways to be more diligent in reporting occurrences

Gatineau, Quebec, 27 October 2014 - A review of reportable rail occurrences conducted by the Transportation Safety Board of Canada has identified late and missing accident information from the three railway companies it examined. The TSB is calling on all railway companies to meet their obligation to report occurrences outlined in the TSB Regulations. Reporting this information is mandatory and the TSB will consider enforcement action, if required to address non-compliance.
The TSB regularly reviews its railway occurrence database to ensure data integrity, and to identify any potential safety issues. Railway-specific data reviews were recently completed for Canadian National, Canadian Pacific, and Montreal, Maine & Atlantic railway companies. The examination determined that a total of 254 occurrences involving these railways had been unreported or reported late to the TSB over a 7-year period. The TSB has communicated these results to the railway companies and has stressed their reporting obligations.
The majority of these occurrences were minor, and many involved rail yard operations, where there was limited damage, and no injuries reported. These occurrences have now been entered into the TSB railway occurrence database.
The updated TSB Regulations which came into effect earlier this year clearly outline occurrence reporting requirements. The TSB will continue to monitor railway occurrence data and fully expects that the industry will report occurrences in a timely manner and in full compliance with the TSB Regulations.







China
China Said to Plan Merging Nation’s Largest Trainmakers.(Bloomberg)


Lessons from China's export of high-speed railway.(China Daily)


France
Stuck in the slow lane: 40 per cent of France’s renowned high-speed TGV trains still run on regular tracks, damning report says.(Mail Online)


Nigeria
Modernising the Railway System.(Individual.com)


Philippines
The world as seen from trains(inquirer.net)


USA
Moving Forward with America's High-Speed Rail Projects.(City Lab)


U.S. rail traffic keeps on keeping on.(Railway Age)


www.progressiverailroading.com
  • Amtrak reports record revenue, higher ridership in FY2014
  • CTA proposes more rail service in 2015
  • Illinois, Pennsylvania provide funds for ports
  • BNSF honors Utah Railway as Short Line of the Year
  • Major businesses form coalition to support Caltrain's modernization
  • MTA tabs former NTSB director Mayer as chief safety officer
  • Minnesota DOT schedules public meetings to review state rail plan
  • BNSF moves 1,000th crude-oil unit train from North Dakota hub
  • Rail supplier news from Alstom, Jacobs, McMillen, Parsons Brinckerhoff, Bombardier, Fairmount Santrol and Hatch Mott MacDonald (Oct. 28)




  • Other Railway Press
    www.railway-technology.com.
    UK's National Training Academy for Rail on track to boost engineering skills
    Construction on the UK's new training facility National Training Academy for Rail (NTAR) is on track to boost rail engineering skills in the country when it opens in late 2015.        

    Alstom to supply new train sets for Kochi Metro Rail in India
    India's Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) has awarded a €85m contract to Alstom for the delivery of 25 metro trains to Kochi Metro Rail.

    NSW shortlists four corridors for Western Sydney light rail project
    Australia's New South Wales (NSW) Government has announced the shortlisted four corridors for the Western Sydney light rail network that connects Parramatta with other centres in the region.

    UK Government backs proposed HS3 development
    The UK Government has agreed to the proposed development of HS3, a high-speed rail link that connects cities in the north, in a bid to improve connectivity and reduce journey times.

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    UITP - Advancing Public Transport


    New database on world metro figures in 2013


    On October 20, UITP launched a new database providing the latest figures on the use and infrastructure of metro networks worldwide.  With almost 150 cities and metropolitan areas worldwide having a metro system, they provide the backbone of public transport networks in an ever-increasing number of places world-wide.
    While many cities opt to invest in building new or upgrading existing metros, a myriad of factors such as the number of lines, stations, the integration of the metro within the urban fabric, or high-quality service and reliability play a key role in unlocking the potential of metros to transform and improve the urban mobility landscape.


    This new database provides a snapshot of the metro networks operating in 2013. Annual ridership figures are supplemented by data describing the metro infrastructure for each city: the number of metro lines, the length of the lines and the number of stations. The cities included are grouped by country and by world region.
    More information is available here.


    Contact: Mircea STERIU, Statistics Manager, mircea.steriu(at)uitp.org


    ===============================================================


    Bombardier Press Release.

    Bombardier Presents INNOVIA Metro 300 Design for Riyadh Metro

    October 27, 2014 Berlin Transportation,  Press Release
    • Bombardier presents BOMBARDIER INNOVIA Metro 300 design to the Governor of Riyadh
    • ArRiyadh New Mobility consortium will deliver the highly reliable driverless urban metro solution for the new Line 3 to attract citizens from road to rail in the Kingdom’s capital

    Rail technology leader Bombardier Transportation presented to Prince Turki bin Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz, Governor of Riyadh and Chairman of the Arriyadh Development Authority (ADA), the new INNOVIA Metro 300 design for the Riyadh Metro Line 3 (Orange) which has reached its final design stage on-time. Bombardier, a member of the ArRiyadh New Mobility Consortium (ANM), will supply 47 two-car INNOVIA Metros, custom-designed to reflect Saudi Arabia’s culture of beautiful design and in compliance with ADA’s technical requirements.


    To create a world class metro for Riyadh, the INNOVIA Metro 300 vehicles will be equipped with proven technologies. The BOMBARDIER MITRAC rotary motor propulsion delivers short travel times, high acceleration performance and train braking energy recovery. The BOMBARDIER FLEXX Eco bogies are lightweight and robust for reduced energy consumption and low lifecycle costs. The carbodies will be constructed from recyclable aluminium with a steel under-frame and composite end cap.


    Attractive passenger friendly interiors will be fitted with three classes of accommodation: First class cars for families and singles, family-only cars and singles-only cars. Three bi-parting doors on each side of each car and spacious entrance areas will permit fast and safe boarding, while the walk-through gangways and wide aisles will help passenger flow and enhance safety. Comfortable seating is plentiful in all classes and passengers with restricted mobility have their own designated spaces. The large front windshield and side windows create a bright and comfortable aesthetic and provide a scenic view for passengers. Passenger information systems and advanced security features, such as on-board cameras and two-way communication systems, will further enhance the interior environment for passengers.


    Speaking about the new metro, Philippe Casgrain, Vice President, Europe, Middle East and Africa, Systems Division at Bombardier Transportation said: “When public transit is attractive and reliable, then all socio-economic groups can be encouraged to move from road to rail. The appealing design of the driverless INNOVIA Metro 300 vehicles for Riyadh Metro is complemented by proven Bombardier technologies to provide fast, safe and comfortable travel for Riyadh’s citizens for many years to come.”


    ADA is leading the implementation of the Riyadh Metro project. Six railway lines with a total route length of 176 km are being constructed at a cost of USD $22.5 billion. This massive investment is part of the Riyadh Public Transport Project (RPTP) and will establish a world class public transport network designed to entice Riyadh’s growing population out of their cars and onto public transit.
    The ANM consortium is delivering Line 3 (Orange) as a complete turnkey solution in a contract worth USD $5.9 billion. ANM comprises of two groups who will design, build, construct and commission the new line. The electrical and mechanical equipment, including vehicles and signalling, will be delivered by the Electromechanical Work Group (EWG) whose members are Ansaldo STS and Bombardier Transportation. System infrastructure will be delivered by the Civil Work Group (CWG) whose members include Salini-Impregilo, Larsen & Toubro and Nesma.

    Presence in Saudi Arabia

    Bombardier Transportation has established a wholly-owned subsidiary in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and is fully committed to building a strong local skill base there. In addition to Riyadh Metro, Bombardier is delivering other major projects in the Kingdom including the fully automated, driverless INNOVIA Monorail 300 system for the King Abdullah Financial District, the turnkey INNOVIA APM 300 automated people mover system at the King Abdulaziz International Airport in Jeddah, and for the 450 km Haramain high-speed rail line between Mecca and Medina, Bombardier is supplying Talgo with the MITRAC 3000 propulsion equipment and FLEXX high speed bogies for the power-heads of the 35 very high speed trains which are currently under construction.
    ==================================================================







    Train trip from Moscow to the French Riviera (Russian Railways on YouTube)



    No comments:

    Post a Comment

    Tell us your Railway News!