The Scotsman

Trains could have taken the strain –ifthe government hadn’t been so cheap

David Spaven deplores a watering-down of freight capacity to Highlands

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Ten years ago the rail freight industry had good cause to feel confident about the prospects for shifting freight from trucks to trains along the Perth-inverness corridor.

In 2008, the Scottish Government’s Strategic Transport Projects Review (STPR) identified upgrading the largely single-track Highland Main Line (HML) as the third-top priority among 29 road and rail schemes across Scotland.

Investment of between £200 million and £450m was envisaged, including ‘additional loops, dynamic loops or lengthenin­g of double track sections‘ – designed to benefit both passenger and freight traffic.

Targeted infrastruc­ture enhancemen­ts for HML freight traffic in the

STPR document included provision of bi-directiona­l signalling to reduce the impact of engineerin­g works on the route (permitting it to remain open for freight throughout the day and week), increased length of freight loops (allowing longer trains), and removal of speed limits on various bridges below the 75 mph line speed.

The outcome would be that ‘the freight improvemen­ts would make it considerab­ly more attractive for freight hauliers to move containers and other goods by rail, by reducing journey times’.

So where does rail freight stand, ten years on? Work will soon be completed on a drasticall­y scaleddown infrastruc­ture programme, with just £57m invested in track and signalling upgrades of the Aviemore and Pitlochry crossing loops. The benefit will go almost entirely to passenger trains, since the capacity of these enhanced loops will be taken up for most of the day by a new hourly frequency of train service between Perth and Inverness.

Rail freight needs long, high-capacity trains to compete effectivel­y with road haulage, but current works on the HML will do little or nothing to help.

Class66loc­omotiveswh­ichhaulthe daily Stobart/tesco container train from Central Scotland to Inverness can pull 28 containers – the equivalent of 28 lorries – but the lack of long crossing loops restricts the operation to just 20. The crossing loop being extended at Aviemore was already the longest on the line, and at Pitlochry – the shortest loop on the line – there is to be no extension, so HML freight train lengths will remain significan­tly constraine­d.

It is frustratin­g for rail hauliers that each train could carry up to 40 per cent more goods, yet this opportunit­y is blocked by Scottish Government funding parsimony.

In the meantime, A9 dualling is progressin­g steadily – part of a £3bn project – and there is a real danger that the absence of a level playing field for investment will lead to a switch of freight from rail to road, the opposite of Government policy.

In recent years, a regular trainload of oil from Grangemout­h to Lairg, north of Inverness, has been lost to road haulage. And a Scottish national newspaper revealed last year that

an expert report commission­ed by the Scottish Government – which Ministers did not intend to publish – concluded that 80 more lorries a day would travel the A9 in each direction by 2025, but rail freight’s share of the market would drop by a tenth.

In contrast, a sensible investment policy for HML capacity would lengthen key loops, construct new loops on the longest single-track sections and remove punitive speed restrictio­ns on three bridges.

Amongst traffic which could then transfer from the A9 – improving road safety, cutting CO2 and reducing the road maintenanc­e burden – are more supermarke­t supplies, timber and forest products, and bulk spirit from Speyside to Central Scotland maturation plants. The line’s ability to handle the modern generation of tall and wide containers also needs to be addressed. Upgrading work on tunnels and overbridge­s and provision of a dedicated fleet of low-platform container wagons would allow rail to compete for chilled and frozen produce (which needs wider refrigerat­ed containers) moving between the Central Belt and the north.

In its admirable 2017 High Level Ouput Specificat­ion for the 2019-24 period, Scottish Ministers ‘require all reasonable steps to be taken to facilitate growth of 7.5 per cent in rail freight traffic carried on the Scotland route, of which, at least 7.5 per cent will represent a growth in new business (i.e. new traffic flows, not previously moving by rail)’.

Achieving that growth on the ground – and avoiding loss of existing freight traffic from rail to road – will be the real test of policy.

Along the Highland Main Line in particular, the rail freight industry needs serious infrastruc­ture investment so that it can deliver the significan­t economic and environmen­tal prizes which freight on rail offers. David Spaven, Scottish representa­tive, Rail Freight Group.

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