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High Speed Railroad

Why High Speed Rail Is A No Brainer In The U.S.

By Chris Nelder
Monday, October 19th, 2009

Chris Nelder recently wrote a fantastic piece about high speed rail in our sister publication Energy and Capital. I found the article to be on point and completely relevant for Green Chip readers, so I've decided to send it to you today.

I think you'll really enjoy it.

jeff signature

Jeff

_ _ _

"'Boondoggle‘, 'Loss-making whim‘, ‘Monument to bad territorial planning'. . .

Such are the arguments of high speed rail critics, as the United States finally gets on board the passenger rail revolution that is sweeping the world.

But that quote wasn't about the U.S., and it wasn't about today's debate.

It came from an essay by José Blanco López, Spain's minister of transport and public works, which was published in a new pamphlet from SERA, a sustainability activist organization within the government Labour party. He was talking about the two decades of opposition that conservatives had mounted against the country's progress in building a high speed rail system.

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Starting with a line from Madrid to Seville in 1989, Spain pursued an aggressive and determined commitment to high speed rail that, by 2012, will produce the longest system in Europe. This year alone, most of the country's 19 billion development budget will be invested in high speed rail. By 2020, López says, more than 90% of the country's total population will be within 31 miles of a high speed train station.

Here he put his country's achievement in perspective:

Shielded behind overly simple, short sighted cost-benefit analysis, critics complained with those arguments against high speed projects over years, until the success of each one of the new corridors proved them wrong and showed that in troubled economic times, the best investments for a society are the ones which improve equality.

History has proved rail's critics wrong in Spain, as economic development and rider enthusiasm followed it everywhere it went.

Cretinous Shortsightedness

Even so, ever unwilling to learn from the successes of the rest of the world, the U.S. is now starting the same effort at about the same place as Spain was 20 years ago.

The president of the U.S. High Speed Rail Association, Andy Kunz, appeared on Fox Business last Friday to make his pitch. And what argument did the show's overcoiffed co-host raise? "Amtrak has been in the red for years and years and years, and nobody in charge over there seems to be able to turn a profit, despite the fact that everybody I know takes the train from New York to Washington D.C., the Acela. It's just not working though financially," she whined.

After Kunz explained that that the Acela leg (with a maximum speed of only about 100 mph) was in fact profitable, and that the rest of the system needed to be upgraded so that it was equally attractive and profitable and capable of speeds over 200 mph, the host pressed on: "How do you get people to ride it?" Kunz patiently explained his point again, and pointed out that when Europe opened its new high speed lines, they filled up with riders immediately. The hosts then tossed off a quick wisecrack about the Chunnel and muttered about the need for profitability, but assured the audience that "Nobody more than Fox Business wants to see new ventures succeed."

Be that as it may, one wonders why Europe's success would not convince them that high speed rail would be a good thing for this country. A projection from rail proponents FourBillion.com indicates that building the 9,000 miles of high speed corridors identified by the U.S. Department of Transportation would create 4.5 million permanent jobs and 1.6 million construction jobs, save 125 million barrels of oil, eliminate 20 million pounds of CO2 per mile per year, reinvigorate U.S. manufacturing, and generate $23 billion in economic benefits in the Midwest alone — all alongside a long list of intangible side benefits.

Putting aside the cretinous shortsightedness and obstinacy of conservative media, let's take a look at what the rest of the world is doing.

A Global High Speed Rail Explosion

The UK's Labour party is also pursuing an expansion of high speed rail, having commissioned a study on building a new line from London to the West Midlands and extensions to the north. Currently, Britain has only one high speed line, the 69-mile-long "High Speed 1" link from London to the aforementioned Channel Tunnel ("Chunnel") to France. The Tories have offered their own £15.6 billion plan, so it seems likely that Britain will soon have a new high speed project.

France, as I mentioned last year, already has the wonderful 200 mph high speed TGV network, with 1,100 miles of track, more than 400 trains, and the third-highest ranking of rail passengers per year, behind Switzerland and Japan. Personally, I found it to be the most enjoyable travel experience I have ever had.

eac image1
Bombardier's ZEFIRO 380

This week, the Chinese government awarded a $4 billion contract to build 80 high speed (236 mph maximum) electric train sets for the new 3,700-mile-long high speed train network it is building. Half of the contract went to Bombardier Sifang, a Chinese joint venture with Berlin-based rail giant Bombardier Transportation (TSE: BBD.A). The company will begin delivering the trains in 2012 and finish by 2014— boom, done.

Bombardier is already building 20 sleeper trains for China and another 20 passenger trains, in addition to the 500 high-power electric freight locomotives that it contracted to build for China in 2007.

Russia is taking the plunge into high speed rail as well, spending nearly $1.5 billion to upgrade 401 miles of track between Moscow and downtown St. Petersburg, and buy eight electric Sapsan trains made by German conglomerate Siemens (ETR: SIE) with a top operating speed of 217 mph. Four runs a day will make the trip in less than four hours, compared with an average five hours to make the trip by airplane, including the time wasted getting to and from the airport and running the check-in and security gauntlets.

Meanwhile, Back in the States. . .

Calling the U.S. "a developing country in terms of rail," a Siemens representative told the New York Times last week that his company was a candidate for a proposed high speed link between San Francisco and Los Angeles, along with Bombardier and Japanese bullet train manufacturer Hitachi.

The California line is on the short list of high speed rail priorities prepared by the America 2050 group, ranking it fifth nationally in terms of ridership demand behind four other lines for the Northeast.

chart 1 us map

High Speed Rail Phasing Map by America 2050. Source.

SCNF, the French company that runs the TGV network, has submitted its own plan to the U.S. Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) for four 220 mph corridors in California, Florida, Texas, and the Chicago-Midwest area. The company believes it could open the first line from Milwaukee to Detroit by 2018 and be in full operation by 2023. The costs would be recouped quickly, according to SNCF, returning triple the $69 billion cost of the Midwest corridor within 15 years in environmental and other benefits.

All Costs Considered

Building America's high speed rail network will be expensive — about that, there is no disagreement. The $8 billion appropriated for high speed rail in the stimulus plan was dwarfed by the $103 billion in applications the FRA received for the funds, and is a small fraction of what the total network will cost. The California run alone will probably cost over $40 billion to construct, and that's after the state's existing commitments to building support networks and light rail links.

On the other hand, as the director of the BART light rail system pointed out this week in his testimony to San Francisco city supervisors with the city's Peak Oil Preparedness Task Force, the U.S. currently spends as much on parking as it does on national defense. I haven't run the numbers, but it seems within reason that if that is the case, spending that money instead on high speed and light rail would cover a very large part of the total cost.

Indeed, all of the cost arguments I have heard against rail are incomplete and wrong.

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The true costs of remaining committed to our current road and air infrastructure are never taken into full account. . . like the health care costs of polluted air; the cost of continuously maintaining roads, bridges and tunnels; the availability of materials (remember, several cities in America literally could not buy asphalt during the oil frenzy of last year, because refiners were cracking every last lighter molecule they could from the crude); the trillions of dollars we are spending on oil imports and defense operations in oil producing regions of the world; the billions' worth of damage that our current ways do to the environment; the insurance costs of keeping up 240 million cars and light trucks; the damage and death that those millions of drivers cause; and so on, ad infinitum.

Rail is cheaper, safer, and better on every single count.

When the boundaries are properly defined, the entire transformation of transportation from liquid fuels to renewable electricity would create millions of permanent jobs, and could probably pay for itself.

But the cost isn't really the point anyway.

The Future: A No-Fly Zone

America still has no energy plan, let alone a plan to address the looming threat of peak oil. With the decline of global oil production starting around 2012 already "baked in," due to a lack of sufficient oil megaprojects, we desperately need to start making tracks toward a high speed rail infrastructure. . . or face a painful future of fuel shortages and economic dislocation (at best).

No part of our transportation system is as vulnerable to volatile fuel prices as the airline industry. It was built on the expectation that oil would rarely cost more than $40 a barrel, and it is completely dead if oil stays over $100 a barrel. Last year's oil price spikes put many smaller carriers out of business and cost the major carriers billions. Then the operators who had the largest hedges against rising prices last year got whacked again as prices plummeted.

For my money, the airline industry may as well be dead. Not just because of the damage that oil price volatility has done and will continue to do — and not just because the experience of air travel has become a painful routine of delays and personal insults — but because it's so inferior in every way to high speed rail travel for distances under 500 miles. The TGV line from Paris and Lyons virtually eliminated air travel between those cities, and the high speed line from Madrid to Barcelona cut air travel in half in the first year of its operation.

Forward-looking investors would be wise to accumulate long positions in some of the major players in high speed rail, which have enjoyed a very nice rally over the last three months, as the next wave of investments in it began to hit the press:

chart-2 nelder 10-1

I continue to believe that rail — particularly high speed rail — is the longest safe bet one can possibly make. As I have explained in this column over the last several years, we simply cannot replace enough gasoline- and diesel-burning cars with ones that run on electricity to address the peak oil challenge in the time we have left.

Like compressed natural gas vehicles, PHEVs and EVs are "silver BBs" that will help cushion the blow, but in the long term and for the majority of miles traveled, rail is truly the only answer. Rail is by far the cheapest and most fuel-efficient form of transport, requiring about a third less fuel than air for personal travel, and as little as 3% of the energy for freight.

The serious pursuit of high speed rail would also make a real and significant dent in CO2 emissions, and enable part of the urgent transformation we must accomplish from liquid fuels to renewably generated electricity. As Lord Andrew Adonis, Britain's transport secretary, put it in the SERA publication: "High speed rail is now pretty well a ‘no-brainer' transport strategy for the 21st century."

The rest of the world is already kicking our butts in deploying renewable energy. China is running circles around us in long term resource planning and buying up every hard asset under the sun. And compared with the rest of the developed (and developing) world, we're bringing up the rear in rail.

But it doesn't have to be that way.

It's Go Time

If you've watched any of the new Ken Burns series on America's national parks, you know that protecting the common good has always been a struggle against vested interests and conservatives resistant to change. It took strong-willed men of vision like Teddy Roosevelt, John Muir, and Stephen Mather to override the opposition and do the right thing for the future. We need that kind of leadership now.

If I were President Obama, I would direct the Department of Transportation to immediately begin transforming America's infrastructure to one based on electric rail, regardless of the long-term cost, starting with the highest potential traffic and fuel savings and working our way down the list from there. I would do as the French did when they created the TGV: Declare eminent domain and lay in the high speed rails where they make the most sense. I would restrict federal funding for roads and bridges to critical maintenance projects where rail can't take over the load in time — with not a penny more spent on new car-based infrastructure. I would forbid any subsidies for cars and trucks with a fuel economy of less than 30 mpg. I would move all subsidies for fossil fuels into renewable energy — then double or triple them — to ensure that we can run that new electric infrastructure cleanly. I would bind Congress to my purpose and ride roughshod over the objectors, making it my number-one priority.

I know it may seem hard to believe, with oil holding steady around $70 and gasoline around $3. . . but if you haven't studied the data, then take the word of a guy who has: We're in serious trouble, folks. The Armageddon of transportation is dead ahead and we need to move aggressively and determinedly to head off the peak oil challenge. Rail is hands-down our best and biggest shot.

Until next time,

Chris

 


Editor's Note: From solar and wind to geothermal and biofuels, Green Chip readers want to know which renewable energy resource will take over where fossil fuels leave off. The answer is...all of the above!

There is no one single solution to today's energy crisis. However, the combination of all viable renewable energy resources, coupled with energy efficiency, conservation and smart grid development will not only lead us to energy independence and a cleaner, more sustainable energy infrastructure — but also to what will soon prove to be the greatest investment opportunity of the 21st Century.







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Comments:

Comment by Robert Russell on 2009-10-19
Very well done; just didn't mention two of the things need to occur: emphasis on nuclear power, and building the smart grid to deliver electricity from the clean power generators to the consumers. The hysteria over nuclear power must subside through education to overcome the disinformation campaign that hat prevailed the last forty years and cost us so dearly.
Comment by Lloyd Weaver on 2009-10-19
New rail yes, but not the way it’s being built now, and it should be interstate highway elevated rail based, so speeds need to be moderated from what is in EU.

Copying the EU system will not meet our needs. We need a truck container or 80,000 lb load rated remote controlled modular system. Thus, it is not a conventional train system per se that we need to solve our surface transport problems for the foreseeable future. It can do passengers too, but it also has to be this container rated system.

And once all parties agree upon the new elevated rail system design and business plan, we don’t have to be unfriendly to road finding while we are doing this entire new rail system. The reason for this is the new rail system can be 100% private bond financed. Very little of the finding needs to be public with a toll based elevated modular rail infrastructure as it will provide good returns to bond holders. Thus, we can keep financing roads just as we have been.
Comment by Hans Dieter Franke Dr. on 2009-10-19
It is rather simple arithmetic that high speed trains are the most energy-effective means of transportation. But there is more to it. From my days as a university student up to now I always had a Porsche. But now, being much older I notice it just a big waste of precious time to drive a car from A to B. In a high speed train, you have enough space for a laptop, and some books and papers, you have internet access, you can make cell phone calls, you have a dining car, a coffee bar car, a conference compartment, and service on call. Much more could be done, such as car on demand at the terminal station etc. But anyway one can be productive while traveling and reduce time waste to a minimum.

Regards
Dr.H.D.Franke , Germany
Comment by John Holt on 2009-10-19
While I agree on the need, there is a greater need for local light rail networks to replace our reliance on the auto. These places you mention that have high speed rail, also have efficient local mass transit, and they had that first. Lets address needs before wants. jkh
Comment by Robert Weinberg on 2009-10-19
America has a chance to lead and not follow. Virtually all of the the world's high speed rails are deployed on the ground or elevated and supported from underneath. This initial design flaw builds multiple large scale costs and inefficiencies into the resulting systems. Alternatively, if the trains were designed to be suspended from and overhead monorail they could be elevated above intersections without stopping traffic and use existing rail and road right of ways without disruption existing traffic. There are many other significant advantages to this concept that was engineered by a US company and proposed for projects that were never funded. The design incorporates aspects that handle freight and individual cars on the long leg or their commute. In Miami they are considering building a multi billion dollar tunnel for freight from the ports to the highways to avoid the current routing of heavy trucks through the city. Much cheaper to use airspace over or along current right of ways. They are considering high speed rail from Orlando to Miami. How many intersections will that cross, stalling traffic, burning gas, wasting productive time, endangering pedestrians, etc? I'm sure you get the idea. There is an advantage to not being first. That is, we could get it right and lead the world. Why am I not optimistic? De Tocqueville said America had a government of lawyers running a technocracy that could be better governed by engineers. Interesting to note that about 10 of the top 12 communists running China are engineers. If anyone has the resources or political leverage to explore this potential quantum advance in ground transportation, please contact me. Substantial engineering and planning has been done and there is much more to the story.
Robert Weinberg,
President
First Boca Associates, Inc.
Boca Raton, Florida
(561)482-1250
FBAinc@bellsouth.net
www.FirstBoca.net
Comment by jcfrench on 2009-10-19
I have been for rail trans. since the 70's. I have been discusted with the Oil-Auto-insurance scam that has been used to steel from the common people of the world for years. It is no joke and no way to travel using a 2000 pound auto for 150-300 lbs. of pay load. It is time for a rail system that you can use your car as a cabin on a train. Drive the first 25 miles and the last 25 miles. slam dunk, Done.
Comment by Bill Todorof on 2009-10-19
Did not the US, thru MIT develop the first Mag Lev trains in 1953, which were greatly copied world wide, and did not the first directional force magnetic structures (Halbach Array) which vastly improvedthe lift and directional field capacitys for MagLev trains come out of OakRidge labs in the 1980's Why are we not in the front row?
Comment by Bruce McHenry on 2009-10-20
Ladies and Gentlemen:

According to the Bureau of Transportation Statistics 2004 Pocket Guide, Page 18:

Passenger-Miles
I-city/Amtrak 0.005559
Transit rail 0.014108
Commuter rail 0.009548
Passenger Cars 2.574882
Other 2 axle 1.491164

(adjusted, all numbers in trillions, data for 2001)

There's is a big problem here, folks. It is one of magnitude. How is a rail concept invented in the 1820's, which went from the dominant market share 100 years ago to about 0.03/4 or less than 1% today, going to fulfill Chris Miller's prophecy? Just because of top speed???

"... but in the long term and for the majority of miles traveled, rail is truly the only answer"

Most miles traveled are local. Most traffic congestion and delays suffered are also local. National HSR will not provide any new opportunities here. It will not touch people's daily lives. In fact, only a minute fraction of the population would ever use it on a weekly or even monthly basis.

What would it cost to have a dramatic success for intercity rail in the US and octuple passenger-miles to 1 in 100? Maybe $200 billion with overruns? How much more on-going subsidy would it keep the white elephant running then?

Mr Miller, you have bought a pie-in-the-sky but very populist stuff package here. If you stop to think about the settlement patterns and realize that the sunk cost of housing is ten times that of roads and cars, then you might start to think about 21st century transportation systems that serves people's daily needs while also reducing the need for oil.

There are engineers working on such thoughtful dreams. They conceive of radically new architectures that could serve everybody everyday. But they can't even get 1/1000th of what Obama has allocated to HSR for preliminary work. The real innovators would still be discounted 100,000:1 if and when they get their first $4 million. This is terribly short-sighted.

To look further ahead and explore some really innovative and useful ideas, see the links on the agenda at http://DiscussIT.org/transportationand http://Roadtrains.us

America. Will it be the land of invention? You choose.
Comment by TOM on 2009-10-20
High speed rail works in Europe because of the high cost of auto transportation. Further, auto ownership is not as wide spread as it is here in the states. Thus the average family's only means of transportation is the train. I thought there was a survey in Europe showed that train ridership was beginning to fall among those familys that owned automobiles?
Comment by Peter Locke on 2009-10-21
Great article. Sorry, I took offence at the whacks aimed at conservatives. Also, I think the idea of what President Obama 'should' do, or can do might be overrated (I hope). It looks to me like a case where 'everyman' might need to fight the oligarchies, whether they be government or private.
Comment by Peter Locke on 2009-10-21
What do you do when you get where you;re going? That may be the European problem. I think I have a solution, and it would be appropriate for air travelers, now. The rental car companies need to step up with a 'Rent-it Like You Own It' program. It would be like a lease except that you could 'return' the car at your departure point, and pick up its replacement at your destination. When you returned to your starting point, you would get a similar car...not the same one. Ownership, but not of a particular vehicle.
With this kind of system, you could travel across the country, or the World, without driving, and still have your car.
Comment by JT on 2009-10-22
(I have commented on the cited previous high-speed article) Great article and great philosophy, particularly considering peak oil and our energy dependence on unfriendly nations. Implementation would provide true job creation and stimulus (manufacturing jobs and export, too, if handled properly); along with boosting a new energy grid and renewable energy. Greatest drawback: There is nobody in Congress or the Administration with the vision, foresight, and intestinal fortitude (guts) to move on it; and private industry won’t take it on if there are not incredible salaries and bonuses for the powers that be.

Some points:

High-Speed must truly mean high speed. Must probably average near 200 mph. This average speed requires rapid acceleration and powerful, dynamic deceleration, and very short station stops. Thus, it would have to be a dedicated system, no or very limited freight only trains, because they cannot attain the quickness to move without delaying passenger trains. The dedicated system must not have auto/truck/bus crossings at grade---underpasses and overpasses would be necessary.

Even with very short station stop times, provision must be made for passengers’ checked baggage, and for Fed Ex, UPS, USPS, and similar same-day or next-day parcels. If substantial baggage is checked, it may be palletized for quick baggage car loading and unloading. Substantial (and lucrative) UPS. etc., that exceeds pallet capacity could be handled as TOFC or COFC at the end of the passenger train, so the whole car could be very quickly snipped off (or added to the train) if necessary.

Occupied private autos, etc., should not be transported. Speed in loading or unloading them would not be possible, and fossil fuels to heat or cool them would be counter-productive. Also, auto passengers would not be able to access restroom or eating/drinking facilities at 200+ mph. An electric auto rental/exchange program (recently described in Forbes magazine) might service the need for a private auto at destinations.

Food and drink must be considered, and could be lucrative, but probably not sufficient to require a separate bar car or dining car. However, a portion of a passenger car could be equipped as kitchen facilities, and food quality could be greatly better than airline ‘food’ because of relatively fresh preparation, although served at the passengers’ seats.

First Class night travel could use the same type of ‘lie flat’ seats as some overseas airlines’ ‘business class,’ adding heavy curtains for privacy and quiet if necessary.

A train’s dynamic deceleration would pump power back into the power grid for use by other trains, and into the nation’s grid if unneeded by the train grid.

IMHO, this type of transportation will eventually be forced upon this country; but it behooves us to proceed now while the nation so desperately needs jobs and investment.
Comment by Scott Baker on 2009-11-06
Anyone interested in HSR, or in how to pay for it, should read Fred Harrison's excellent 200pg study of it: Wheels of Fortune. Harrison examines rails systems all over the world, past and present, and concludes that only a Land Value Tax - that is, a tax that captures the rise in value resulting from rail transportation - can pay for it. This is what's been done wherever successful rail has been implemented. Fares won't cover it without driving away the passengers (this is why every private municipal rail system eventually becomes public) and general revenues will never be allocated to it properly. Only capturing the increased value of real estate along the right-of-way is enough to pay for railroads. It's also fair to tax those who benefit the most, so they don't get a "free ride."
That said, please explain to me how China can build 3700 miles of new rail in 2 years for a measly $4 billion, while we don't start talking seriously until we hit $100 billion. Something's very wrong here.
Comment by Stephen Wang on 2009-12-29
I agree that high-speed rail is the most efficient and most cost-effective mode of transporting high volumes of people over medium and long distances. It's model becomes a challenge to the airline industry and has many pros.

However, it (as well as it's subway cousin) is by far not a fix-all solution to all our transportation problems. Having to walk to the rail station (what happens in inclement weather) may take up to 15 minutes. Then having to cram into a subway that travels from stop to stop and load/unload (5 mins each). Then getting off at my stop and having to walk another 15 minutes to my final destination. A simple journey across town (with 20 stops in between) can take over 1 1/2 hours.

Comment by Joe Grazzio on 2009-12-29
I suppose it depends on where you live. For me, it's a 5 minute walk to the light rail from my house, then a 5 minute walk to my office. I save about $50 a month on parking downtown, and I don't have to deal with traffic. The light rail is usually full, but I'm never "crammed in" and even with a couple of stops along the way, it's a pretty convenient system. And it definitely beats sitting in traffic and spending money on gas. I hate buying gas because I know that everytime I do it, I'm sending money to countries that hate us. Yeah, even in bad weather, I'll take the light rail. It's just a better option all around.