AMT OCT/NOV 2020

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RAIL, SHIPPING & LOGISTICS

High-speed rail: a fast track to recovery? Proposals to build a high-speed rail network linking Australian cities have been surfacing intermittently for decades, most recently raised as a way to boost our post-pandemic economic revival. However, there are also widespread concerns about the feasibility of such a plan. Here Greg Moran of the Grattan Institute voices his doubts, while Marcus Luigi Spiller of the University of Melbourne looks at the positives.

High-speed rail on Australia’s east coast would increase emissions for up to 36 years Bullet trains are back on the political agenda. As the major parties look for ways to stimulate the economy after the COVID-19 crisis, Labor is again spruiking its vision of linking Melbourne, Sydney, Canberra and Brisbane with high-speed trains similar to the Eurostar, France’s TGV or Japan’s Shinkansen. In 2013 when Labor was last in government, it released a detailed feasibility study of its plan. But a Grattan Institute report released in May shows bullet trains are not a good idea for Australia. Among other shortcomings, we found an east coast bullet train would not be the climate-saver many think it would be.

The logic seems simple enough Building a bullet train to put a dent in our greenhouse gas emissions has been long touted. The logic seems simple – we can take a lot of planes and their carbon pollution out of the sky if we give people another way to get between our largest cities in just a few hours or less. And this is all quite true. We estimate a bullet train’s emissions per passenger-kilometre on a trip from Melbourne to Sydney would be about one-third of those of a plane. We calculated this using average fuel consumption estimates from 2018 for various types of transport, as well as the average emissions intensity of electricity generated in Australia in 2018. If we use the projected emissions intensity of electricity in 2035 – the first-year trains were expected to run under Labor’s original plan – the fraction drops to less than one-fifth of a plane’s emissions in 2018. It should be remembered that while coaches might be the most climate-friendly way to travel long distances, they can’t compete with bullet trains or planes for speed.

There’s a catch So, where’s the problem? It lies in construction. A bullet train along Australia’s east coast would take about 15 years of planning, then would be built in sections over about 30 years. This construction would generate huge emissions. In particular, vast emissions would be released in the production of steel and concrete required to build a train line from Melbourne to Brisbane. These so-called ‘Scope 3’ emissions can account for 50%-80% of total construction emissions.

AMT OCT/NOV 2020

Scope 3 emissions are sometimes not counted when assessing the emissions impact of a project, but they should be. There’s no guarantee the quantities of concrete and steel in question would have been produced and used elsewhere if not for the bullet train. And the long construction time means it would be many years before the train actually starts to take planes out of the sky. This, combined with construction emissions, means a bullet train would be very slow to reduce emissions. In fact, we found it would first increase emissions for many years.

Slow emissions benefit We estimate building the bullet train could lead to emissions being higher than they otherwise would’ve been for between 24 and 36 years. This period would start at year 15 of the project, when planning ends and construction starts. At the earliest, it would end at year 39. This is the point at which some sections of the project would be complete, and at which enough trips have been taken (and enough plane or car trips foregone) that avoided emissions overtake emissions created. This means the train might not actually create a net reduction in emissions until almost 40 years after the Government commits to building it – and even this is under a generously low estimate of Scope 3 emissions. If Scope 3 emissions are on the high side, emission reductions may not start until just after the 50-year mark – 36 years after construction began. The bullet train would create a net reduction in emissions from the 40 or 50-year mark onwards. But the initial timelines matter. The world needs to achieve net zero emissions by about 2050 if we’re to avoid the worst impacts of climate change. All Australian states and territories have made this their goal. Unfortunately, a bullet train will not help us achieve it. Hitting the 2050 net-zero emissions target implicit in the Paris Agreement remains a daunting but achievable task. Decarbonising transport will play a big part, including the particularly tricky question of reducing aviation emissions. But during the most crucial time for action on emissions reduction, a bullet train will not help. Our efforts and focus ought to be directed elsewhere. Greg Moran is a Senior Associate at the Grattan Institute. Milan Marcus assisted in the preparation of this piece. This article was originally published by The Conversation. www.grattan.edu.au www.theconversation.com


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Articles inside

MANUFACTURING HISTORY – A look back in time

4min
pages 120-121

COMPRESSORS & AIR TECHNOLOGY

12min
pages 102-105

WASTE & RECYCLING

4min
page 106

Boeing Australia awarded for carbon fibre recycling program

3min
page 107

PhoenxPLM: Digitally transforming businesses Part 2

6min
pages 100-101

AMTIL FORUMS

18min
pages 108-111

Performance management in a COVID-19 world

3min
page 98

BOOK REVIEW: Drain The Defence Swamp

3min
page 99

Resilient leadership in the time of COVID-19

7min
pages 96-97

AMGC: Ten ways for Australian manufacturers to succeed

5min
pages 94-95

MATERIAL REMOVAL

3min
page 93

FELIXprinters: Vegan-friendly 3D-printed salmon

3min
page 92

Technofast – Innovating and succeeding in challenging times

4min
page 84

Sentient Bionics gets a helping hand from the AM Hub

10min
pages 88-91

AM capability sees Romar Engineering soar

5min
pages 86-87

A centralised manufacturing network – Laser Central

4min
page 85

Evolve Group: The value of Oz design/manufacturing

10min
pages 80-83

One size does not fit all

8min
pages 60-61

Government urged to modernise outdated welder training

8min
pages 76-77

MRO tools weather turbulent industrial economy

6min
pages 70-71

Bertazzo Engineered – Engineering passion

6min
pages 74-75

Carmaker sees 1,150% increased tool life

4min
page 69

Iscar: Grade upgrade

5min
pages 66-68

ONE ON ONE Professor Bronwyn Fox

14min
pages 62-65

Mitsubishi Electric – Manufacturing in the new normal

6min
pages 58-59

ROBOTICS & AUTOMATION

8min
pages 56-57

Angel Trains rolls out 3D-printed parts on UK trains

4min
pages 54-55

Austal ferries highlight Australian capability

6min
pages 52-53

PRODUCT NEWS

18min
pages 36-43

VOICEBOX

21min
pages 30-35

High-speed rail: A fast track to recovery?

8min
pages 50-51

Innovative ship cladding creates jobs/cuts emissions

3min
pages 48-49

Rail – A route to recovery?

12min
pages 44-47

INDUSTRY NEWS Current news from the industry

28min
pages 18-29

From the Ministry

3min
pages 14-15

From the Industry

4min
pages 16-17
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