Rail (UK)

RSSB to co-ordinate industry sustainabi­lity objective

-

The RSSB (formerly the Rail

Safety and Standards Board) is to be lead developer of a coherent and unified framework for sustainabi­lity, as a response to passenger, community and Government expectatio­ns.

RSSB Sustainabi­lity Director George Davies told RAIL’s National Rail Recovery Conference on February 24 that this will result in a strategy likely to be known as sustainabl­e rail. He said that it will be co-created with (and for) the industry and will set common overall objectives for rail.

Davies said that on the UK rail network there is a fragmented approach to sustainabi­lity, with independen­t action under way in pockets and often with single stakeholde­rs committed to doing the right thing, but with inwardlook­ing approaches.

The organisati­on has taken on the role on behalf of the Department for Transport, and Davies explained: “Once that defined ambition is clear, we will be able to show how asset owners, train operators and suppliers all need to take on responsibi­lity.”

He added that the industry is understand­ably focused on carbon, but other topics such as air quality, biodiversi­ty and social impact aren’t being given due attention.

“What is a sustainabl­e railway?” Davies (pictured) asked delegates.

“The answer is quite simple.

It’s a railway that is fit for the future - one that helps solve the sustainabi­lity challenges we face rather than contribute to them.

“We need to change the way we think, act and measure sustainabi­lity success. In many cases we need to measure the sustainabi­lity impact we have and get a handle on the scale of the issues.

“We need buy-in from across the industry and crucially we need a lot of help from the supply chain. The role of government in this is fundamenta­l, too. Setting the policy structure that provides long-term clarity and incentivis­es the right outcomes is a really crucial lever.

“As we look at the replacemen­ts for franchises, we need to ensure that contracts awarded are shaping the right responses with realistic performanc­e conditions that are consistent­ly applied.”

Davies spoke of being encouraged that despite the pandemic, the railway still views sustainabi­lity as a top-level strategic issue, adding that the industry was “in a really good position to move forward. We need to be more proactive and not simply react to challenges set down by ministers.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom