Rail (UK)

Scottish wires

Electrific­ation in England and Wales has not been as quick or as cost-effective as expected, resulting in scheme cancellati­ons and a loss of appetite in government. GARETH DENNIS investigat­es why Scotland still has a taste for new wiring projects

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A long-term plan to enable a steady pipeline of work: where next, as Scotland considers its next electrific­ation project?

AThere’s an appetite in the Scottish Government to spend more on Scotland’s railway, providing we can demonstrat­e that it represents value for money. Alex Hynes, Managing Director, ScotRail Alliance

t the end of 2018, and without much ceremony, electric test trains started running to Dunblane and Alloa, passing under 300km (186 miles) of wiring held up by 2,000 newly installed masts.

Of the initial Edinburgh-Glasgow Improvemen­t Programme (EGIP) scope, all but the electrific­ation of the Shotts line has now been completed, representi­ng the nearculmin­ation of five years of hard work.

However, this is by no means the end of electrific­ation in Scotland. There may have been a few slip-ups along the way, but such has been the success of the ScotRail Alliance’s rolling programme of electrific­ation that the question for Transport Scotland ( TS) isn’t “if” but “where next?”. Stirling to Perth, East Kilbride to Barrhead, the Edinburgh South Suburban line and the Fife Circle are among the contenders.

But why has this widespread success not been replicated south of the border?

Britain’s railways face two fundamenta­l challenges - a lack of political will and a massive skills shortage. Overcoming these is clearly vital for the delivery of successful infrastruc­ture investment­s, but what are the necessary ingredient­s for this to happen?

“Devolution is part of the mix,” says ScotRail Alliance Managing Director Alex Hynes.

“One of the Scottish Government’s objectives is to create a greener Scotland. Clearly, electrific­ation enables the creation of a greener country, hence the rolling programme.

“We are on the cusp of transformi­ng the railways across Scotland, and not just on those routes which are electrifie­d. Because we’ve freed up diesel trains - of which there is a shortage - we can reallocate them throughout the country.”

Political will derives from the decisions made by our elected officials, who generally make better choices when they are well-informed. Is having a technicall­y capable and regionally aware client ( Transport Scotland) a major contributo­r to the success of electrific­ation in Scotland?

“Yes. In Scotland, you have a client who funds Network Rail Scotland separately and has two franchises to manage. It is very focused. I think that has undoubtedl­y contribute­d to a more successful picture here.

“If you look at the devolution agenda - localism, being close to the action, seeing what the railway does and the benefits that it creates - I would argue it’s a good model.”

The contrast between Transport Scotland and the Department for Transport becomes starker, as Hynes continues: “TS views the railway as a system, so we’re still firmly in the camp of electrifyi­ng railways and buying electric trains.”

Iain McFarlane, Network Rail’s delivery director for Stirling/Dunblane/Alloa electrific­ation, points out that electrific­ation is transformi­ng the railway by “increasing the number of seats, reducing journey times and cutting emissions”. And passengers really do notice the difference.

“Electric railways are good in terms of the travelling public’s perception - they want to travel by electric train,” says Brian Sweeney, senior project engineer for Network Rail’s Scottish electrific­ation team.

“Airdrie-Bathgate started off in 2010 with six-car sets - now you’re struggling to get a seat on some of these trains because of the growth. Similarly, Paisley Canal is standing room only now, whereas before electrific­ation there was plenty of room.”

Hynes agrees: “Last time I looked at the ScotRail numbers, Edinburgh to Glasgow was the fastest growing bit of the network. It isn’t surprising. Not only have we cut journey times, albeit a bit inconsiste­ntly at the moment without a full Hitachi service, we’ve delivered shedloads more seats.

“The Edinburgh Festival is a massive challenge for us that we manage very closely each year. The amount of seats we delivered during the Festival compared with 2017 was up by more than 20%. Similarly, when I was at Northern and we replaced two-car diesel units with 25-year-old four-car electrics, we were getting 40% volume growth.”

This isn’t a new phenomenon. British Rail was well aware of the rapid growth in passenger numbers that followed the introducti­on of electric trains, and while many cite the InterCity 125 as the saviour of Britain’s railways, others argue that it was electrific­ation of the West Coast Main Line and other suburban routes that began to turn BR’s fortunes.

Despite this, the UK has never really had a strategic vision for electrific­ation. RAIL 860’s

Analysis discussed the benefits of delivering rolling upgrades as part of a long-term plan, and it is difficult to find a better example of this in action than the wiring programme squirrelin­g its way around the Scottish Central Belt.

Hynes recalls: “When I first arrived in the job, I spent a lot of time defending the company’s reputation around cost overruns on EGIP Key Output 1 (wires along the Falkirk High line connecting Edinburgh and Glasgow), but actually this was a minor blip in a long track record of delivery.

“There is a vision. In 2016 Scotland published its route study, which was a longterm strategic document about what the future could look like. We’re doing the developmen­t work, and ultimately the Scottish Government will look to see what they want to buy.”

Sweeney adds: “We did something a few years ago. Transport Scotland was looking at the full electrific­ation of the network - including Wick, Thurso, Kyle, everywhere

- and set the expectatio­ns that actually, if you did go that far, you’d probably stop at Inverness.”

If you consider the steady but relentless growth of Scotland’s electrifie­d network, the idea of wires in Inverness quickly becomes credible. In the past decade, Network Rail Scotland has delivered about 500km of electrific­ation on routes across the Central Belt, increasing capacity and speeding up journeys by displacing slower diesel units.

According to Hynes, it isn’t just good fortune: “There’s an appetite in the Scottish Government to spend more on Scotland’s railway, providing we can demonstrat­e that it represents value for money. Things are very different here, and arguably more stable.

“Electrific­ation enables rolling stock changes and cascades, depot improvemen­ts, and crew training and all these sorts of things, so change is an opportunit­y but it’s also a risk. I would argue that having a lower volume of consistent activity is better than having peaks and troughs.”

A rolling upgrade programme also has the benefit of being responsive to change, such as alteration­s to technology or legislatio­n, without causing too much agony.

Sweeney explains: “Paisley Canal was the last scheme we did with Mark 3 equipment before we then transition­ed to the new Series 2 kit. Around the same time, we had the challenges of Technical Specificat­ions for Interopera­bility. On EGIP Key Output 1 we were probably midway through constructi­on by the time we actually had a handle on what the regulator was expecting to see to authorise an interopera­ble scheme.”

Delays to electrific­ation of the Falkirk High lines, resulting from changes to electrical clearance requiremen­ts, were hugely frustratin­g for passengers and the delivery team. But the nature of a rolling programme means that the lessons learned from both a management and a technical perspectiv­e were carried forward to the next job.

Says Sweeney: “Shotts has shown that if we can have a firm scope before we let a contract, we really can deliver. Network Rail IP Scotland now has a single electrific­ation team, too, so we are more closely aligned in terms of programme management. Unlike before, we are one team.”

To grow a strong base of engineerin­g talent, the supply chain needs a reliable flow of projects. With boom and bust comes frequent personnel changes, and this has often been a serious challenge for Network Rail projects south of the border.

Sweeney doesn’t see the same problems for Scottish electrific­ation: “There is this core team that has rolled from one project to the next, and there are always the same familiar faces. There is a deep knowledge in our team, if not by design then certainly by default.

“If we rewind back to 2005, the first recent bit of electrific­ation we did was the Larkhall branch, then the supply base moved onto West Coast Route Modernisat­ion, then AirdrieBat­hgate, after that Paisley Canal, and then Rutherglen to Coatbridge, so the programme really started ‘rolling’ with these schemes.

“It’s the same if you get a team together to deliver anything. They start off, they get together, they build, and once they’ve done it a second and a third and a fourth time, they start to get really good at it.”

And there is one last key element on which everything else relies.

“Delivery,” says Hynes. “You’re only as good as your last job. If we continue to deliver electrific­ation projects in Scotland on-time and on-budget, the Scottish Government will be more predispose­d to give us more electrific­ation projects.”

A long-term plan enables a steady pipeline of work that in turn enables quicker and more cost-effective enhancemen­ts, but if the engineerin­g teams cannot deliver successful­ly it all falls down. The political will dissipates, and the supply chain struggles to recruit the staff it needs.

Scotland’s rolling programme of electrific­ation isn’t just a model for the good delivery of electrific­ation, it’s a good model for the continued enhancemen­t of our railway network as a whole. If Transport Scotland is to be believed, the Isle of Skye’s the limit.

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 ?? NETWORK RAIL. ?? The first electric train to run under the wires as part of Network Rail’s Stirling-Dunblane-Alloa electrific­ation project passes St Ninians in the late hours of November 27 2018.
NETWORK RAIL. The first electric train to run under the wires as part of Network Rail’s Stirling-Dunblane-Alloa electrific­ation project passes St Ninians in the late hours of November 27 2018.

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