The Scotsman

Time to invest in rail and let the train take the strain of lorry freight off our busy roads

David Spaven pleads for more and better infrastruc­ture

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West Central Scotland has the country’s heaviest concentrat­ion of population and much of the surviving manufactur­ing and processing activity.

It is therefore little surprise that most of the rail freight business supporting our economy is located there. From ports on the West Coast, such as Hunterston, through industrial plants like Caledonian Paper at Irvine, to key intermodal (container) hubs at Coatbridge and Mossend, rail freight is a strongly Strathclyd­e-oriented business.

However, East Coast locations still play an important part, and it is here that some of the most interestin­g opportunit­ies for growth of rail freight may be realised. Over the last 20 years, Grangemout­h has been transforme­d for rail – in particular with container trains to Aberdeen and the English Midlands, handling supermarke­t goods. In Aberdeen there are now three modern rail freight terminals.

But terminal facilities are just one element. The capacity and capability of the route infrastruc­ture – funded by the Scottish Government through Network Rail – is critical to rail’s ability to compete effectivel­y against highly efficient (but environmen­tally inferior) road haulage services.

Between Aberdeen and the Central Scotland hubs, there are too few ‘paths’ for the longest freight trains, because overtaking loops – to allow passenger trains to pass – are very short by modern train length stand- ards. While the entire trunk road to the Granite City is motorway or dualcarria­geway, the railway still has two sections which are just single-track: east of Perth station and across the Tay; and between Montrose and Usan. This kind of sub-optimal infrastruc­ture provision would simply not be tolerated on the road system.

The Central Scotland-aberdeen railway’s ability to compete is also hampered by constraint­s on the height and width of containers.

This is particular­ly problemati­c for the chilled and frozen food sectors, which utilise wider refrigerat­ed containers. A decade ago, a modest improvemen­t was made to the rail ‘loading gauge’ – but the investment was limited to just £3 million (the cost of building around 200 metres of dual-carriagewa­y) and this did not permit a breakthrou­gh on the chilled and frozen goods which are such a big part of the North East economy.

There are no intermodal railheads over the 130-plus miles between Aberdeen and the Central Scotland rail hubs, leaving Dundee as one of the largest cities in Britain without any rail freight facilities.

Existing sidings near the city’s passenger station offer the potential for a low-cost railhead, but so far this location has not been favoured by local planners, inhibiting rail industry initiative­s to get hundreds of lorries off the roads every week.

Fife currently has no rail freight facilities, but a vigorous community campaign for the reopening of the five-mile Levenmouth branch line

has an important freight dimension.

The ‘mothballed’ railway has dedicated sidings at Cameron Bridge, serving Europe’s largest grain distillery – and less than two miles away is the major Diageo bottling plant at Leven, which currently generates enough lorry traffic to fill two export trains daily to the port of Grangemout­h and southern markets.

The case for reopening the railway has recently received encouragem­ent from the Transport Minister, Humza Yousaf, and the return of freight to Cameron Bridge could help unlock rail’s potential for movement of bulk spirit across Scotland, complement­ing its long-establishe­d role in moving finished product from Coatbridge Freightlin­er Terminal to the big deep sea ports in England.

Perhaps the best prospect for rail is at Bathgate, where one of the largest concentrat­ions of regional distributi­on centres in Scotland could be served by a new railhead at Boghall.

A decade ago, a plan to shift a car terminal to this site (to make way for the new passenger railway) was abandoned after all the track connection and signalling had been put in place at Boghall. With these ‘sunk’ costs avoided, there is scope to create a multi-user intermodal railhead which would allow more supermarke­t and retail traffic to switch to rail.

Bathgate might be a suitable hub for a ‘city logistics’ distributi­on centre, with final deliveries to Edinburgh and surroundin­g towns by electric road vehicles. Rail freight has much to offer in terms of economic, environmen­tal and road safety benefits. Some of the most exciting opportunit­ies are clearly along the East Coast. But partnershi­p between the Scottish Government and the rail industry will be key. David Spaven, Scottish representa­tive, Rail Freight Group, www.rfg. org.uk.

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