steveintoronto
Superstar
Just got a chance to read more of the Caltrans study linked in prior post, I highly recommend the reading of it for many posters in this string. Higher Speed Freight on HFR really helps buttress the business case. This also melds with the Pearson Hub topic. HFR hosted higher speed freight is of course apart from temporally separated local freight, which with few exceptions, will necessarily be slower speed conventional diesel, and able to run-through to conventional freight yards or connections at junctions along the line. Some businesses might be induced to set-up operations along the HFR route on the premise of 'express freight' service, but with very affordable land costs.
From the Caltrans study, from a European paper (Produced by CTC & Associates LLC):
(Pardon the rough format, if links don't show, access the study from the url at bottom)
From the Caltrans study, from a European paper (Produced by CTC & Associates LLC):
(Pardon the rough format, if links don't show, access the study from the url at bottom)
http://www.dot.ca.gov/newtech/resea...high-speed_rail_preliminary_investigation.pdf[...]
This article provides background on the Euro Carex project, which plans to use existing HSR
lines to transport air freight.
Highlights from the article:
A group aiming to substitute 300kph rail services for some short-haul European air freight
flights hopes to launch its first services between the Continent and the [United Kingdom
(UK)] later this decade, it has announced after bringing a freight-carrying French high-speed
train to the UK.
François Coart, strategy director of Europorte, an arm of France’s Groupe Eurotunnel that is
participating in the Euro Carex project, said the group had identified sites at four mainland
European airports and in south-east England as terminals for the service, which it hopes to
launch in 2017 or 2018.
....
The project has backing from several express parcel delivery services—including the U.S.’s
UPS and FedEx and the Netherlands’ TNT Express—as well as the four airports that could
be served—Amsterdam Schipol, Paris Charles de Gaulle, Liège Airport and Lyons Airport.
Euro Carex aims to shift to rail both some of the feeder flights that bring parcels and air
freight to the express package providers’ main hubs, as well as some of the truck and van
movements to and from the airports.
....
It was “not rocket science” to build the relatively simple rail terminals required, Mr. Coart
said. Each would cost between €30m and €50m to build.
Mr. Coart was speaking after Euro Carex for the first time brought a French TGV train to
London to demonstrate how loading and unloading would work. The train is one of the
handful of the 30-year-old first wave of French high-speed trains that has been converted to
carry mail for La Poste, France’s post office. The train had called at both Lyons and Charles
de Gaulle airports before heading through the Channel tunnel to London.
....
Unlike the existing postal service TGVs, these would have doors large enough to accept air
cargo containers from aircraft. The train would be able to carry around 120 tonnes of
packages, around the same as seven Boeing 737 aircraft or seven articulated trucks.
Related Resources:
Euro Carex: Cargo Rail Express, The European High-Speed Rail Freight Network, Euro
Carex, 2013.
http://www.eurocarex.com/
This web site describes the Euro Carex European freight service, which uses the existing
HSR network to carry air freight. The project shifts air cargo that is currently transported by
truck and short- and medium-haul planes to high-speed trains. The first phase runs until
2015, and connects the Amsterdam-Schiphol, Liège, Paris-Roissy-CDG, Lyon-Saint
Exupéry airports, as well as the London basin. In a second phase, Carex will spread to
Germany and additional airports in France; the third phase brings in airports in Spain and
Italy. One Carex train can carry 100 tons of freight.
As the web site notes, the Euro Carex project requires:
•
A specific rolling stock to transport air pallets and air containers in high-speed trains.
• Dedicated rail terminals called “railports” in the immediate vicinity of airports and
HSR lines.
• Committed and determined public and private partners.
The Technical File portion of the web site (see the left navigation bar) provides details on
the project’s principles, facilities, operations and results.
“Project of High-Speed European Rail Freight Service Connected to Airports and
Logistic Areas,” Euro Carex: Cargo Rail Express, December 2011.
http://www.eurocarex.com/pdf/pressreview/100103240178_carex-pressreview.pdf
This presentation includes a history of the Carex project and offers details of the project’s
network, the Carex railports in Europe, and the rolling stock used for the service. Data
offered in the closing slides of the presentation includes:
•
•
Initial investments:
o The Euro Carex trains: Between 600 and 700 million € for 20 units according
to the manufacturer and options selected. Maintenance costs are not
included.
o Railway connection to the high-speed line: Cost varies from 10 million to over
100 million € per site depending on the length and complexity.
o Railport terminals: Between 15 million € for a basic terminal with two tracks
and 25 million € for a bigger one.
Estimation of annual expenses for the first phase (operations):
o €125 M in 2015, with the first phase of the Euro Carex network.
o Of this cost, €86 M is for rolling stock, train maintenance, driving, energy,
train paths (slots), branch line maintenance.
o The Euro Carex trains will emit approximately 35 times less carbon than the
aircrafts and trucks currently used.
“SNCF Faces New Challenges,” Keith Fender, International Railway Journal, December 22,
2009.
http://www.railjournal.com/index.php/blogs/david-briginshaw/sncf-faces-new-challenges.html
http://trid.trb.org/view/2009/C/911893
From the abstract:
The views of David Azema, Director of Finance and Strategy at French National Railways
(SNCF), are presented in regard to development of SNCF’s freight business and high speed
services. Major changes are scheduled for rail freight in an effort to obtain a sounder
financial footing, but wagonload freight will at the same time not be exited. These changes
include increased combined and container transportation, Autoroute Ferroviaire piggyback
service development, and a Carex interairport high-speed freight project. Introducing “short-
line operators” is a key part of the plan for improved wagonload traffic viability. In regard to
high speed, a fleet of 35 international trains will be used, from 2015 on, mainly on cross-
border routes. Incumbent operators will be impacted by the change of mindset required by
liberalized passenger operations. [...]
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