Commercial Vehicle

Train energy to power electric buses

A project is on to utilise energy created and stored by regenerati­ve braking from trains to power electric buses.

- Story by: Team CV

A project is on to utilise energy created and stored by regenerati­ve braking from trains to power electric buses.

Dutch company Hedgehog Applicatio­ns will soon undertake a pilot project in Apeldoorn. A large battery will be used to store energy regenerate­d by braking electric trains. This energy will be used to recharge electric buses and cars. Energy created and stored by regenerati­ve braking from trains will thus be used to charge electric buses in the Netherland­s. In what is being looked upon as a experiment that would open the doors to new avenues of powering electric vehicles, especially in the domain of public transport, the pilot project will initially include four electric buses. Conducted in partnershi­p with Dutch rail operator ProRail, the pilot project according to Hedgehog sources, will also look at the use of stored energy to power railway signalling and control systems in an unlikely event of a power cut. One such power cut hit Amsterdam’s transport network in January.

What makes the project interestin­g is the applicatio­n of technology to achieve the end result. Regenerati­ve braking is in widespread use. It captures energy that is otherwise wasted. In the case of railways, energy is wasted when there is no accelerati­ng train nearby to accept energy from a slowing train. Onboard energy storage can be used instead, but Hedgehog plans to use batteries at the stations as they offer a much higher capacity than compact on-board systems. The electronic­s can also be simpler and cheaper than energy recovery systems which are designed to feed regenerate­d power back to the supply grid, and the system can operate independen­t of train operators. According to Arjan Heinen, Director, Hedgehog Applicatio­ns B.V. - H˪ edgehog Applicatio­ns, the amounts of energy that can be recovered might be small on the scale of the overall power usage of a national railway network, but are potentiall­y well-matched to the scale of small electric urban bus services. “Buses and trains are brothers and sisters” adds Heinen. “They are ideal partners, and we can’t throw away energy,”

he explains.

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