Industry Europe – Issue 21.5

Page 14

FAST TRACK TO THE FUTURE The TGV is almost middle aged. The very first TGV high-speed rail service was officially launched 30 years ago on 21 September 1981 between Paris and Lyons. Robert Williams reports on the growth of Europe’s high-speed rail network .

T

he first generation TGVs ran at a maximum speed of 260 km/h, eventually raised to 300 km/h, which is now the benchmark running speed for all TGV-type trains on new lines in France and on the European high-speed rail network The TGV is probably the best known high-speed railway in Europe, but it was actually Italy that built Europe’s first highspeed line in 1977 between Florence and Rome. The 1974 petrol crisis forced many European countries to consider investing in modes of transport which did not guzzle fossil fuels. But it was France that took up the challenge most enthusiastically. The TGV network now snakes across the country in every direction from the capital. There are connections to Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands and – through the Channel Tunnel – the UK. In Europe today, only Spain has more high-speed track – almost 2000km – than France. Its first AVE route was Madrid to Seville, opened in 1992. Since 2008 the 621km route from Madrid to Barcelona has cut journey times from more than six hours to just two and a half hours. The midway point on the route,

14 Industry Europe

Zaragoza, has become a key meeting point for business people from Spain’s two most important cities. The line is being extended into France to join the European network. The original high-speed lines in France, Germany and Italy were seen largely as a means of overcoming bottlenecks on the national networks. These bottlenecks limited capacity, caused conflicts between types of traffic and reduced reliability. Higher speeds were in many respects an accidental, but very positive, by-product of improved reliability. Most of these transport infrastructures have been developed under national policy premises. In order to establish a single, multimodal network that integrates land, sea and air transport networks throughout the Union, the European policymakers decided to establish the trans-European transport network, allowing goods and people to circulate quickly and easily between member states and assuring international connections.

European interoperability

The European Union has made the extension of the continent’s high-speed rail network a priority as part of its Trans-European Networks-Transport programme, know as TEN-T. It aims to make Europe’s high-speed rail networks interoperable, whether they are newly built lines or upgrades of older infrastructure. The total length of the TEN-T high-speed network will be 30,000km, of which 20,000km is expected to be in operation by 2020. The first official recognition of a European HSR network was in the 1990s, when the European Commission designated a high speed rail network as part of the Trans

European Network – Transport (TEN-T). The TEN-T network HSR corridors were based on the national networks but extended lines throughout Europe. The majority of funding for TEN-T projects (approximately 90 per cent) is provided by national and local governments. This international HSR network is gradually taking shape. Major building blocks of the network, including the PBKAL (ParisBrussels-Köln-Amsterdam-London) network, and France’s TGV Est have recently been completed. Additional elements including the Lyon-Turin tunnel linking Italy and the Perpignan-Barcelona line linking Spain to the network are under construction. If the European Commission gets its way, Europe’s high-speed railway network will treble in length over the next 20 years. By 2050, the network will be complete. There will be a true single market for passengers, who will make most middle-distance journeys by rail Spain plans to lay 10,000km of new track by 2020 so that 90 per cent of Spaniards have a high-speed rail station within 50km of their home. Sweden is building a line between Stockholm and Gothenburg. In fact, of the 30 projects prioritised under TEN-T, 14 relate to high-speed rail. Supported projects include the new LyonTrieste- Divaca/Koper–Ljubljana–Budapest– Ukrainian border railway axis. In March 2011 the Commission published a roadmap for transport policy which called for a 60 per cent reduction in carbon emissions from the sector by 2050 – a target which cannot be achieved without persuading people to travel by train rather than by car or plane.


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Articles inside

Fine beers from Finland Olvi Oyji

8min
pages 201-207

Pumping it up SKS-Germany

4min
pages 192-195

Meeting the challenges of tomorrow EVVA

5min
pages 196-200

Engineering expertise TBP Group

4min
pages 188-191

Making the most of magnetite LKAB

5min
pages 162-165

Focused innovations FiberVisions

4min
pages 171-175

Broader appeal Dansk Kabel TV

6min
pages 176-179

Healthy progress Texor AB

5min
pages 184-187

Exploiting new resources Talvivaara Mining

5min
pages 157-161

Advancing surface technology

6min
pages 152-156

The heart of the home Jøtul

5min
pages 146-151

Investing in a cleaner future KCM 2000

5min
pages 138-145

Offshore experts STX OSV

5min
pages 124-127

Masters of ‘cutting-edge’ technology ESAB

5min
pages 133-137

Charting new horizons Great Eastern Shipping

4min
pages 128-132

When the going gets tough... Sisu Auto

4min
pages 116-118

Excellence in energy Fouré Lagadec

4min
pages 103-105

Fast and flexible Maaseudun Kone

6min
pages 110-115

True energy efficiency Cryo AB

5min
pages 106-109

Matching supply to demand Rompetrol

5min
pages 100-102

LED technology in a new light Trilux

5min
pages 96-99

Building on great brands

4min
pages 88-91

Vertical diversity Kleeman Hellas

4min
pages 77-81

Taking energy-efficient windows to a new level Inwido

6min
pages 72-76

Delivering excellence in all types of construction projects UNIBEP

11min
pages 66-71

Advancing into new markets

6min
pages 60-62

Flexible technology

4min
pages 56-59

Driving business forward

4min
pages 42-46

Rotary tables for the world FIBRO

5min
pages 39-41

Seizing opportunities ALTA

4min
pages 31-35

Re-defining lubricant technology

5min
pages 50-55

Uniting for the future Yaskawa Europe

4min
pages 36-38

Focus on France Ian Sparks reports from Paris

4min
page 23

Moving on Relocations and expansions

3min
page 20

Back on track

10min
pages 8-10

Rail news The latest from the industry

9min
pages 11-13

Fast track to the future TGV speeds on

6min
pages 14-15

Linking up Combining strengths

5min
pages 18-19

Winning Business New orders and contracts

7min
pages 16-17

Bill Jamieson Crisis point

4min
page 6

Technology spotlight Advances in technology

2min
page 22
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