HCB Magazine January 2021

Page 16

14

A ROLE FOR RAIL

“But it doesn’t have to be like that,” Hore said. Speciality chemicals generally come in smaller parcels and consignees may well lack their own rail facility. In such a scenario, the last mile needs to be a road connection from the terminal to the customer. That is changing, though, with the European single wagon load network allowing movements of, say, a single tank container from hub to hub. Rail has some obvious advantages, particularly in terms of its environmental impact, Hore said. DB Cargo currently uses 61 per cent renewables in its electricity supply and is aiming to increase that to 80 per cent by 2030. In the move towards a circular economy, rail can be part of the answer, he said, offering flexible and sustainable transport.

currently undertaking some trials using Blockchain technology. Hore was questioned about the position of rail in an intermodal logistics operation and, in particular, its competitive position compared to inland waterway transport. This has become more acute during recent low water issues on the Rhine system, which have caused delays in inland waterway traffic. How does rail compete with barges? The two modes are complementary, Hore said. Low water issues are unlikely to go away and rail has to stand ready to take cargo off the rivers. That means that rail operators need to be involved in planning with their customers and to have sufficient track capacity available. “Customers need an ‘always on’ option,” Hore said, though the big issue is likely to be the provision of rolling stock. Solutions to that need to come from rail operators, not the authorities, was Hore’s point. Indeed, DB Cargo is now looking at developing inland port hubs where cargo can move off inland barges and onto rail wagons at points where low water can become an issue. Clearly, planning and visibility – as well as

FIT IN WITH THE WORLD In the modern world, rail also has to fit with its customers’ digital strategies. Rail operators can empower their connected customers and this is an area where DB Cargo is doing plenty of work. It is

vision – will be critical to generating the level of confidence in rail as a flexible option that will be needed if Tarragona is to leverage its other obvious benefits and really make the move to hub status for the chemical industry. That is up to rail operators to deliver. btt.dbcargo.com

RAIL • HOW DOES RAIL COMPLEMENT PORT ACTIVITIES? AND WHAT DO CHEMICAL CUSTOMERS WANT FROM IT? FLEXIBILITY, RELIABILITY AND ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ARE ON OFFER THE PORT OF Tarragona’s annual Med Hub Day was held in virtual form this past November. One of the port’s main elements in its ambition to become a hub for chemical logistics in the western Mediterranean is greater use of rail to connect it with other nodes in Europe, hampered only by the absence – to date – of a seamless connection with the Euro-gauge rail network. But why is rail important? What can it bring to the port-based logistics network? To answer such questions, Patrick Hore, head of the sales and operations centre for chemicals at DB Cargo BTT, had been asked to give his perspective. For a start, he said, rail offers reliability, regularity, connectivity and the ability to scale up. It is ideal for hub-to-hub and cluster-to-cluster movements but that requires similar facilities at either end of the transport chain.

 RAIL TRANSPORT CAN OFFER MUCH MORE THAN IT DOES NOW, IF OPERATORS ADAPT

HCB MONTHLY | JANUARY 2021


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Articles inside

Calendar of regulatory meetings

2min
page 65

Marpol recognises persistent floaters

2min
page 63

News bulletin – regulations

2min
page 64

Joint Meeting starts work on 2023 texts

22min
pages 50-57

PHMSA responds to petitions

16min
pages 58-62

Hoyer’s approach to benchmarking

3min
page 49

Cefic’s guidance on butadiene transfer

3min
page 48

NTSB’s learnings from Hyndman derailment

3min
page 47

ITCO looks at tank container safety

8min
pages 44-46

Conference diary New for 2021

2min
page 40

Incident Log Cut the claims

6min
pages 42-43

GPCA plans a special Forum

2min
page 41

News bulletin – industrial packaging

3min
page 39

News bulletin – storage terminals

5min
pages 34-35

Schütz expands reconditioning capacity

3min
pages 36-38

TSA helps operators deal with the crisis

2min
page 33

Adding to US export capacity

2min
page 32

Product flows again in the US

6min
pages 30-31

Introducing BW Epic Kosan

2min
page 25

Stena stands up for older ships

6min
pages 26-27

News bulletin – tanker shipping

5min
pages 28-29

Making plans for methanol fuel

4min
pages 22-23

Planning an ammonia chain

2min
page 24

BRS looks at the chemship market

5min
pages 20-21

News bulletin – tanks and logistics

5min
pages 18-19

Nexxiot upgrades gateway device

2min
page 11

View from the Porch Swing

8min
pages 8-9

H Essers continues to grow

6min
pages 14-15

Hoyer develops Chempark centre

2min
pages 12-13

Tyczka Gase digitises rail tanks

2min
page 10

BTT provides the links ports need

2min
pages 16-17

Learning by Training

2min
page 7

30 Years Ago

2min
page 6
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