TRANSPORT COMMITTEE
PROCEEDINGS OF 29th OCTOBER
COMMENT by Transport Watch UK
The Association of
Train Operating Companies (FOR
95): The first paragraph
under the heading “Is
the Regulator right……..”
suggests that it is extraordinary
that the portrayal of rail as
“outmoded” could
be debated with any seriousness.
We comment, the really extraordinary
matter is that the rail industry
has succeeded in portraying
itself as efficient compared
with the rubber tyred option
when, for over 50 years, it
has been apparent that the express
coach (and lorry) offers 3-4
times the capacity of the train
at one quarter the cost while
using 20-25% less energy and
imposing one half the casualty
costs suffered by rail passengers.
On page 2 under the heading
“friend of the environment”
we read that a “two track
railway can move 30,000 people
in an hour in each direction”.
In our view that is a fairy
story. Perhaps such a flow is
achieved in London’s underground
but, as far as surface rail
is concerned, we refer to our
comment on the Committee meeting
of 22nd. That provides: “In
2001, between 7 am and 10 am,
467,000 surface rail passengers
entered London. There are 25
pairs of tracks. If 50% of the
467,000 occur in the peak hour
then the flow per inbound track
amounts to less than a pitiful
10,000…” Here we
add, 10,000 people would require
200 50-seat coaches - enough
to occupy one fifth of the capacity
of one lane of a motor road.
If these rights of way were
paved, the spare capacity could
be used by lorries and other
city buses etc. to the relief
of the surrounding road network.
(Off-peak these potential dual
carriageways are almost empty
but London’s streets remain
clogged with traffic).
Under “Getting Safer”.
We read that a train is 7 times
as safe as a car. The truth
is that the KSI casualty cost
suffered by rail passengers
within the envelope bounded
by the ticket barriers is 3.5
times less than suffered by
people in cars (not 7 times
less). If trespassers are included
then the casualty cost per bn
pass-km due to rail is double
that suffered on motorways.
Later we read of the intention
of the Government to provide
£33 billion for rail under
the 10-year plan. We note there
was also the intention of levering
in another £33 billion
from the private sector –
a task which could only succeed
if there were government guarantees.
Since the loans could never
be repaid from income the bill
to the taxpayer would amount
£66 bn, not £33
bn. We then read that latest
costs are around £8 bn
per year, not the original £3
billion. Do these people not
realise that the entire network
could be paved as roads for
as little as £12 billion
– both quadrupling capacity
and cutting cost by a factor
of 4?
(Meanwhile rail maintenance
has caused, and continues to
cause, large scale disruption
to passengers and freight alike,
let alone the disruption caused
by the trivial use made of the
railway rights of way while
they are preserved as railways
– e.g. just imagine what
would happen if they paved the
M1, the M25 and the M6 with
railway lines).
GNER (FOR 115)
The GNER is proud of its performance
and right to point out that
“Thousands of railway
people work tirelessly to operate,
maintain and improve the railways…”
However, we note that these
people have been labouring under
a disadvantage in that had the
rubber tyred option been adopted
costs would have been reduced
by a factor of 4 and capacity
would have been increased by
the same factor. That would
have improved productivity by
a factor of 16. Sadly the workers
have been given 19th Century
tools.
At 1.9 we read that the Regional
Development Agency “states
that the net contribution of
the East Coast Main Line is
at least £100 million”.
We point out, over the decade
rail will extract at least £4,000
from every household in the
land – an immense burden
bearing in mind that the majority
of those people seldom use a
train. Hence we disbelieve the
Region’s analysis –
in any case, and as pointed
out above many times, the railway
function could be discharged
by buses and lorries at one
quarter the cost of the train,
given the right of way.
Connex FOR 113
says “The commuter railway
is a vital part of big cities
like London”. We point
out; it is not rail, per se,
but mass transit which is vital.
Sadly the best option by a factor
of 16 is the express coach -
see above.
We applaud Connex where, at
the bottom of the first page,
the organisation points out
that coach travel is indeed
less costly than the train and
that under-used rail services
should be replaced by coach
services. We regret that Connex
has not noticed that a single
bus lane 3.2 metres wide serving
the New York bus terminal carries
30,000 passengers per hour daily
(all seated)
in 700 45-seat coaches –
at least 3 times more than is
achieved on each rail track
serving London, despite London
rail commuters suffering crush
conditions.
Laing Rail Ltd (FOR
29). In 1.2 Laing says
“The railway performs
a vital role in national wealth
creation.” Why that should
be believed is a mystery which
needs explaining. After all,
the expenditure on the Channel
Tunnel and the associated links
will be around £30 billion
at today’s prices but
the company (a) makes losses
and (b) has a stock market valuation
of less than £1.5 billion.
The implication is that this
Engineering marvel has drained
the nation of nearly £30
billion – effectively
wasting the product of 30,000
working men’s lives.
Similarly, with national rail
which, before receivership was
worth a mere £3 billion
despite the clear
intention of the Government
to pour at least £60 billion
into the system by way of direct
subsidy and guarantees to private
sector loans. Hence, in purely
financial terms, spending £60
billion mending the railway
may be likened to spending £2
million mending a house worth
£100,000 only to find
the selling price unchanged.
The financial implication is
that they may as well tip the
£60 billion into the sea
– equivalent to burning
the residential accommodation
for a city of 1.5 million people.
Meanwhile the SRA’s intention
is to extract at least £100
billion from the exchequer over
the decade (See our comment
to the Committee papers of 15th
October). When they have finished
the system will still be worthless
in the market place and would
vanish overnight without continued
massive subsidy.
Hence, far from rail
performing “a vital role
in national wealth creation”
we say rail is beggaring the
nation.
Why is it that the government
is unable to act in the light
of the costs let alone the other
facts, e.g. that the rail function
could be carried out 16 times
more efficient by express coaches
and lorries, given the rights
of way, than by train…….?.
At 6.2.4. Laing parrots the
view that rail is already “far
safer than road transport”.
We comment, these people have
not done their sums. The reality
is that the casualty cost per
passenger mile suffered by rail
passengers within the envelope
bounded by the ticket barriers
is at least double that suffered
by people in express coaches
(including an allowance for
those injured shortly before
boarding or after alighting).
Additionally, the system-wide
casualty cost attributable to
rail, including trespassers,
is double that suffered by people
on motorways.
Merseyrail (FOR 114)
we pass over without comment.
Passenger Transport
Executive, (FOR 62).
At para 5) we read that rail
is an essential ingredient for
a thriving regional economy.
We disagree; rail drags a regional
economy down due to the high
costs, and low capacity. What
is required is low-cost mass
transit and that is not the
train, see above.
At para 9) we read that rail
requires 1/7th the power of
road transport. However, Dr
Leunig pointed out on 15th October
that rail is energy-intensive
compared with a motor coach
and no more fuel-efficient than
an average car containing two
people. That is consistent with
the memorandum submitted by
Transport Watch.
TSSA (FOR 61)
– we pass over without
comment.
The Rail Regulator (FOR
99). Upon reading the
Regulator’s memorandum
we conclude that the he is in
denial of the facts. We regret
not having primed the Committee
to ask the appropriate questions.
E.g. Is the Regulator aware
that:
- A single bus lane 3.2 metres
wide carries 700 buses in
the peak hour on the approach
to the New York Bus Terminal,
providing seats for 30,000
passengers?
- The average passenger flow
in the peak hour on the tracks
into central London is below
10,000?
- The width occupied by each
rail track is the same or
wider than the New York bus
lane?
- 1,000 50-seat buses would
be sufficient to carry the
peak hour passenger flow at
Waterloo – all seated,
requiring one third to one
quarter the width used by
the trains?
- Surface rail is (a) no more
fuel efficient than a diesel
powered car containing two
people and (b) uses nearly
double the energy required
by express coaches?
- The casualty cost imposed
by rail on its passengers
is at least double that suffered
by people travelling in express
coaches?
- Track maintenance for rail
is probably at least 10 times
as expensive as would be required
if the rail function were
carried out by buses and lorries?
- Passenger rail rolling
stock is at least 3 times
as expensive as equivalent
rubber tyred stock?
- When the industry has finished
spending the £100 billion,
the system will still be worth
nothing in the market place
and would vanish overnight
without continued massive
subsidy. That is to say, the
£100 billion will, in
purely financial terms, be
entirely wasted, bringing
to nothing the product of
one hundred thousand working
men’s lives; equivalent
to burning the residential
accommodation of a city of
2.5 million people?
- The entire network could
be paved for less than one
fifth the cost of the rail
modernisation programme so
providing all London commuters
with seats at a fraction the
cost of the train?
Had such questions been asked
with persistence we believe
that the Regulator’s case
would have been revealed as
a sham, along with nearly all
the other contributions to this
inquiry.
.....................
Paul F Withrington Director
Transport Watch
Transport Watch is an independent
association not connected with
any business or political party
initially funded by a private
trust and dedicated to making
the best use of land already
committed to transport in the
interest of the community as
a whole.
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