Rail (UK)

The long game

Cost-optimised solutions for building and maintainin­g high-speed rail from SYSTRA.

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SYSTRA prides itself on its unique future-proofed approach to the design of high-speed railways and the systems needed to operate them. By considerin­g whole lifecycle costs as a matter of course during each stage of design developmen­t, the company has carved itself a strong reputation for identifyin­g innovative design interventi­ons to new infrastruc­ture that significan­tly reduces its ongoing operationa­l and maintenanc­e costs.

This has been demonstrat­ed in a host of flagship internatio­nal high-speed projects, as clients increasing­ly take longer term views of both capital (CAPEX) and operationa­l (OPEX) expenditur­e in favour of a sharper focus on the total cost of ownership ( TCO).

For SYSTRA this has required not only a commitment to achieving and maintainin­g technical excellence but also robust planning for all lifecycle phases, so that a careful balance can be struck between a potential short-term rise in CAPEX that might be required to yield much larger and longer term reductions in OPEX.

SYSTRA’s Director, Railway Systems, Dominique Roux explains: “We approach and handle every project with this in mind between future operations and initial design. The trade-off is an interestin­g one and it hasn’t always been done right in the past, particular­ly considerin­g how railways have been procured.

“It might be that adjusting the design and increasing asset reliabilit­y, for example, adds cost in the constructi­on phase but reduces the cost of long-term maintenanc­e. It can be difficult to persuade clients sometimes that it’s the right thing to do, but we think that reducing OPEX doesn’t always have to cost much more in CAPEX, and we will always suggest the optimum trade-off.”

To successful­ly strike this balance, SYSTRA is able to not only call on its own experience in designing some 4,000 miles of high-speed railways in the last 30 years, but also the considerab­le operations and maintenanc­e (O&M) expertise of its shareholde­r SNCF.

As France’s national railway company, SNCF manages a network of some 20,000 miles - including 1,650 miles of high-speed lines - and operates 14,000 trains a day.

According to Roux, this advantage also makes SYSTRA best placed to understand that the benefits of taking a longer term approach are not just financial.

This is because increasing asset availabili­ty and moving to a more predictive maintenanc­e regime has been proven to lead to less disruptive maintenanc­e which will, in turn, bring safety benefits to clients during constructi­on and O&M and an improved passenger experience.

He adds: “Some benefits are less quantifiab­le, such as the increased punctualit­y plus passenger comfort and satisfacti­on that comes from having greater asset availabili­ty. O&M that requires fewer possession­s to be taken will mean reducing the need to run railreplac­ement bus services, for example.

“Safety is also increased through remote monitoring and predictive maintenanc­e, and where diagnostic data can be generated by the infrastruc­ture that will reduce the need for regular on-site inspection­s.”

To achieve these objectives, SYSTRA works in close collaborat­ion with infrastruc­ture operators from day one of the design process in order to optimise the constructi­on of new infrastruc­ture for O&M.

This collaborat­ion is particular­ly effective in cases where SYSTRA not only has design responsibi­lity but an ongoing O&M liability, such as the 302km SEA (South Europe Atlantic) line from Tours-Bordeaux, which opened in July 2017.

SYSTRA was involved in every stage of the delivery of Europe’s largest high-speed project to date, from civil engineerin­g and railway equipment design through to dynamic and integratio­n testing.

It also has an ongoing role for the next 44 years as part of the MESEA Joint Venture to provide maintenanc­e.

According to SYSTRA UK’s high-speed rail director Julie Carrier, owning 30% of MESEA created an added incentive for its teams to find innovative ways to design for reduced O&M costs and to integrate cost-efficiency at all stages of the projects.

It is, however, a formula that the company is comfortabl­e working with under a variety of contractua­l models, such as in Africa, where SYSTRA has been involved in a variety of design and build contracts for the continent’s first ever high-speed line between Tangier and Kenitra in Morocco.

She says: “Working with SYSTRA means leaving the client to get on with their job while we continuous­ly ensure that there is an O&M integrated design on their behalf. We are absolute perfection­ists and only focused on getting to the right solution by using our global experience.

“We recognise that the largest benefits do not come when you design in silos, but when it is properly integrated with O&M. That worked particular­ly well on SEA where, as a shareholde­r, there is a direct financial impact which drives different behaviours and by taking a longer term view it means that everyone will succeed or fail together, and that building the railway is not just a walkaway project.

“But it doesn’t have to be that way because

Reducing OPEX doesn’ t always have to cost much more in CAPEX, and we will always suggest the optimum trade-off. Dominique Roux, Director, Railway Systems, SYSTRA

We recognise that the largest benefits do not come when you design in silos, but when it is properly integrated with O& M. Julie Carrier, High-speed Rail Director, SYSTRA UK

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