bringing high speed rail a step closer - building a railway for the 21st century

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BUILDING A RAILWAY FOR THE 21 st CENTURY BRINGING HIGH SPEED RAIL A STEP CLOSER Max Michell, Scott Martin and Philip Laird

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This presentation outlines a proposal for the development of a Medium Speed Rail (MSR) corridor between Sydney and Canberra as a technology tester for High Speed Rail in Australia.

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Page 1: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

BUILDING A RAILWAY FOR THE 21st CENTURY

BRINGING HIGH SPEED RAIL A STEP CLOSER

Max Michell, Scott Martin and Philip Laird

Page 2: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

HIGH SPEED RAIL IN AUSTRALIA IS A STEP CLOSER - OR IS IT?

• The 2013 report to the Federal Government recommended the first stage by 2035 – more than 20 years off.

• That wait will have long since seen the demise of existing East Coast passenger rail outside the urban and commuter areas.

• How can we get High Speed ready while waiting for the real thing to eventuate – some thoughts and proposals in response to this conundrum.

Heading

Page 3: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

WHAT IS HIGH SPEED RAIL?

Page 4: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

Dedicated HSR

Page 5: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

Mixed HSR

Page 6: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

Fully mixed HSR

Page 7: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

Tilting HSR

Page 8: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

Maglev HSR

Page 9: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

WHAT IS MEDIUM SPEED RAIL?

• MSR is a passenger rail system that is capable of running at 160 km/h or better over extended distances.

• MSR is an intermediate technology between classic rail and HSR – can be an end in itself or as a stepping stone to HSR

• Australia is at best at the lower end of MSR – XPT, V/locity, Diesel and Electric Tilt

Page 10: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

HSR IS A HIGH CAPACITY SYSTEM – NEEDS HIGH VOLUME TRAFFIC FLOWS TO SUCCEED:-

• Needs to run between large population centres.

• Needs to feed from other land based transport including Medium Speed Rail (MSR) and urban rail.

• Can replace or complement air travel so needs to be able to interchange at airports.

Page 11: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

IF HSR IS A LONG WAY OFF HAS MSR A PART TO PLAY IN AUSTRALIA?

• Could act as precursor to HSR.

• Could help retain longer distance rail in public consciousness.

• Could enable short sections of eventual HSR alignment and/or infrastructure to provide a useful interim service.

• Could help to change land travel culture to include rail.

• Could include potential HSR feeder routes.

Page 12: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

MSR today – Victoria • Regional rail network

has 160 km/h running on Bendigo, Ballarat and Geelong lines.

• Rail transit times car competitive on speed and frequency

• Significant long-term investment in track and rolling stock

• Some potential for further improvement

Page 13: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

MSR today - Queensland • Narrow gauge 160

km/h electric & diesel tilt trains on North Coast Line (Brisbane- Rockhampton-Cairns)

• Modest infrastructure investment across 1700km-long corridor limits train overall speeds & frequencies

• Potential for significantly upgraded rail infrastructure on parts of the corridor

Page 14: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

• XPT trains now 30 years old but only NSW trains capable of 160 km/h

• XPT services limited to three main lines (South, North Coast, West) with low frequency and low transit speeds.

• No known plans for XPT replacement or track improvement

MSR today – NSW

Page 15: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

WHERE MIGHT MSR BE ADOPTED

• Notable that none of the Melbourne – Sydney – Brisbane route has had any alignment improvement.

• Largest non capital city population is Newcastle area at 421,000, or 738,000 if you include the Central Coast.

• Closest capital city pair is Sydney (circa 5 mill) and Canberra area (412,000)

• Both these are on future HSR route.

Page 16: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

SYDNEY – NEWCASTLE

• High frequency but low speeds – typical semi-fast transit is 2h 27m to Broadmeadow (66 km/h); XPT best 2h 15m (72 km/h)

• Short-term improvements to alignment, new rolling stock and better pathing to increase train speeds and reliability could reduce travel times for ‘semi-fast’ trains to 2h 0m (81 km/h)

• Long-term travel times could reduce further to 1h 30m (105 km/h), but requires major infrastructure upgrades and high-perfomance rolling stock

Page 17: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

SYDNEY – CANBERRA

• Potentially the best candidate for Australian MSR development

• 30 flights (40 mins) and 15 bus departures a day (3h 30m) are main competitors with rail (~4000 seats offered each way / day) along with car

• Medium-term infrastructure upgrading to HSR alignment standard is achievable in stages

• Route to North Canberra has long-term synergy with Sydney – Melbourne HSR route

Page 18: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

CANBERRA TO SYDNEY – SUMMARY

• Distance reduced from 321km (via Tarago) to 270km (via Yass)

• Initial operation at 160 km/h with familiar diesel traction

• Transit times reduced from current 4 h 6m to 2 h 36m

• Transit times further reduced to 2h 0m with upgraded diesel operation to 200 km/h

• Eventual electric HSR travel time ~85m-90m

• Gains for other regional passenger trains of 70m-75m

Page 19: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

North Canberra to Moss Vale

Page 20: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

NORTH CANBERRA TO GOULBURN

• New line from new North Canberra station to junction with Main South near Gunning

• Realigned route from ‘Gunning’ to Breadalbane

• Selective realignment Breadalbane to Goulburn

• Distance reduction of 15km (105km → 90km)

• Transit time reduced from 90 min → 42 min (save 48 min)

Page 21: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

GOULBURN TO MOSS VALE

• Curve easing and selective realignment over much of route

• Significant realignment between Marulan - Exeter

• Distance reduction 9km (79km → 70km)

• Time reduced from 53 min → 37 min (save 16 min)

Page 22: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

Moss Vale to Sydney

Page 23: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

MOSS VALE TO CAMPBELLTOWN

• New route Mittagong to Menangle (‘Wentworth’ route)

• Selective realignment of remainder

• Distance reduction 27km (91km → 64km)

• Time reduced from 68 min → 42 min (save 26 min)

Page 24: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

CAMPBELLTOWN TO SYDNEY

• Route via East Hills – mostly similar alignment to now

• Improvement to junctions at Erskineville, Sydenham, Wolli Ck.

• Curve speed improvement where achievable

• Additional facilities to allow better pathing.

• Distance remains 46 km

• Time consistently 30-35 mins (now variable to 45 mins)

Page 25: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

COST FOR MSR STANDARD RAILWAY

• A cost of approximately $3.5 billion has been estimated for the 200km/h standard diesel operated MSR railway.

• For full HSR, curves would be flattened to 7000m, towns by-passed, Sydney entry improved, plus electrification and trains.

• The 2013 HSR Report suggests $18 billion for the full HSR over the Sydney – Canberra section including a brave amount of tunneling.

Page 26: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

OVERVIEW OF MSR CONCEPT

• MSR on or close to future HSR route is possible between Sydney and Canberra – at travel times half those at present

• Synergy with trains to Melbourne and Southern and Western NSW – a parallel with French TGV or German ICE running on classic rail routes beyond HSR tracks.

• Initial diesel operation allows seamless interoperability with remainder of network.

Page 27: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

OVERVIEW OF MSR CONCEPT (continued)

• Keeps regional passenger rail visible & viable pending go-ahead for HSR (alternative is demise of existing routes and services)

• Provides design and construct experience with value for HSR project when it goes ahead.

• Allows testing of “how can we achieve the best affordable result” rather than the “how much will it cost” of 2013 Report.

Page 28: Bringing High Speed Rail a step closer - Building a Railway for the 21st century

CONCLUSIONS

• There is potential for MSR as the ‘leading edge’ of a full HSR project over appropriate line sections.

• Canberra to Sydney is an obvious choice – large populations with high mobility and mature transport options apart from the archaic rail link.

• If Sydney-Canberra MSR works, there are other regional links which would benefit; e.g. Sunshine Coast, Toowoomba, Albury/Wagga Wagga, Newcastle, Wollongong.