In the UK right now there’s a group commissioned by the Department for Transport to look at long term transportation needs. In the magic mix of solutions they are looking at airport expansion, new toll roads, new high speed railways.
There are three options for the high speed railway:
1. Maglev. A 300mph line, along I’m not sure it will run into cities, so I see little point if you are trying to compete with planes.
2. French/German convention high speed 200mph 25kv AC electrified line, use conventional tracks into cities.
3. And the latest glint in the eye…150mph Gas turbine running on vast amounts of aviation fuel, thus to avoid the expense of electrification. Has anyone told them about the price shocks?
THE government’s chief transport adviser, Sir Rod Eddington, favours plans for a new high-speed rail link that could see jet-propelled trains ferrying passengers between London and Scotland in record times.
The new trains would eschew conventional power sources and would instead be fired-up by a jet engine similar to those used in aircraft.
A prototype, capable of travelling at 150mph, has been built in north America but manufacturers believe that, in the right conditions, it could achieve a much higher top speed.
The jet train plan — which some industry experts have dubbed “Eddington’s Rocket” — would cut journey times between London and cities such as Birmingham, Manchester and Edinburgh.
Virgin Pendolinos, operating at 125mph, are currently the fastest trains running up and down the country.
Eddington, the former boss of British Airways, is considering a new north-south high-speed link as part of a long-term review of Britain’s transport needs.
Tasked with looking beyond 2015, he will present his findings directly to Gordon Brown, the chancellor, and Alistair Darling, the transport secretary, this summer.
Eddington has previously claimed that fast trains would be preferable to many domestic flights. “Everyone should be taking the train,” he said.
“People wouldn’t need to fly between London and Manchester if the service was faster.”
With passenger journeys forecast to rise by 28% in the next decade, Darling is keen to free up capacity on existing tracks. The east coast main line from London to Edinburgh, for example, is already struggling to accommodate extra services.
Eddington believes a new high-speed link may provide a solution to this congestion and has discussed its feasibility with John Armitt, chief executive of Network Rail.
He has also consulted officials at Bombardier, the Canadian maker of the jet train, and at Ultraspeed, a company that is proposing a magnetic levitation — or maglev — system for Britain. Ultraspeed claims its train could reach speeds of 311mph.
A team of experts at Network Rail are now weighing up the merits of the competing technologies, as well as conventional high-speed trains such as the TGV in France, which travels at speeds of up to 186mph.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/ ... _2,00.html
Meanwhile on the other side of the pond..
ere we go again. President Bush puts highly unqualified political supporters in charge of a vital public service, and Americans pay the price.
But this time it isn't the Federal Emergency Management Agency. It's our national passenger railroad - Amtrak.
Amtrak's directors, appointed by the Bush administration based on cronyism, not competence, are shirking their responsibilities and dismantling - through outsourcing and privatization schemes - the very rail company they are charged with strengthening. If we don't stop this runaway train, millions of passengers will lose vital rail service along the Northeast Corridor and across America.
Defying the wishes of a bipartisan Congress, Amtrak board members are pushing a disastrous "reorganization" plan that would dismantle the rail carrier, abandon passengers, dump billions of dollars in costs onto Maryland and other states and allow profit-driven speculators to cherry-pick Amtrak's most prized assets. Other than the White House and its handpicked Amtrak board, few are for this plan.
The Bush administration wants to eliminate federal funding for Amtrak, and the Amtrak board of directors wants to separate the Northeast Corridor from the rest of the network and open the system up to competition/privatization.
The current board chairman, David M. Laney, a Texas attorney, sits at the helm of Amtrak after raising more than $100,000 for the Bush-Cheney campaign.
Another board member's qualification to serve as fiduciary for a multibillion-dollar passenger railroad is his experience as the CEO of Kmart and the Museum Co., both of which ended up in bankruptcy. Undoubtedly, Floyd Hall's $360,000 in "soft money" contributions to the Bush-Cheney machine since 2000 did not hurt, either.
The third private-sector member, Bush-booster Enrique Sosa, told Democratic Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg of New Jersey in June 2004 that he had never ridden on an Amtrak train before his appointment.
Meanwhile, the board has operated without a quorum for several years, casting grave doubt on the legitimacy, if not the legality, of its actions, the most recent of which was the firing of CEO David L. Gunn, a 40-year rail professional. We had strong differences with Mr. Gunn's labor-management practices, but he has forgotten more about passenger rail than the three private-sector Amtrak board members combined have ever known. Mr. Gunn was fired because he refused to take a blood oath to carry out the "kill Amtrak from within" strategy.
Key Republicans are also fed up. House Railroads Subcommittee Chairman Steven C. LaTourette of Ohio recently called the situation "pathetic" and "such a mess that I have heard it said that you couldn't think up a hypothetical case this loony if you tried."
This would be laughable if the travel needs of 25 million passengers (including 2 million Marylanders), the jobs of 20,000 dedicated Amtrak employees (including 2,600 Marylanders) and the health of our transportation system were not at risk.
Cronyism is leading Amtrak over a cliff. The White House and its Amtrak board want to emulate the British rail privatization debacle. That catastrophe caused years of rampant delays, steep fare increases, higher accident and injury rates, and apoplectic passengers. The British government had to end this half-baked scheme and reportedly could face a $40 billion tab - $10 billion more than we've spent on Amtrak in 35 years - to clean up the mess.
http://www.commondreams.org/views05/1215-33.htm