Wednesday 5 Sep 2012
BETTER FREIGHT JOURNEYS FROM FELIXSTOWE AS RAIL LINK GETS GREEN LIGHT
- Region & Route:
- | Southern
The cross-country Felixstowe to Nuneaton rail route has received a major boost with the news that Secretary of State for Transport has approved Network Rail’s scheme to remove a major bottleneck near Ipswich.
The work will enable freight trains carrying containers used by global shipping companies to travel more directly from the Port of Felixstowe to the economic markets in West Midlands, north-west England and Scotland without having to travel through north London, which they currently do, making a valuable contribution to the economy.
Network Rail’s Ipswich Chord scheme will ultimately take up to 750,000 lorry journeys off the road every year – it involves the construction of a new one mile stretch of track, or ‘chord’ line, north of Ipswich goods yard, linking the East Suffolk line and Great Eastern main line.
Today, most of Anglia’s freight trains that need to travel from the Port of Felixstowe to the north have to travel down the busy Great Eastern main line, through London and up the West Coast main line to save having to turn around in the sidings north of Ipswich goods yard to use the shorter cross-country Felixstowe to Nuneaton route. The Ipswich Chord will remove that bottleneck and free up capacity for both passenger and freight services.
The Chord forms an important part of Network Rail’s strategic freight network, a programme of investment to improve freight capacity across Britain’s railway. It complements other work on the cross-country route, including the completion of gauge clearance of the route in 2011, and the ongoing construction of two loops at Ely and a flyover north of Nuneaton station.
Dave Ward, route managing director at Network Rail, said: “This is great news for the freight network in Britain. The work we’ll do at Ipswich Chord, together with the other enhancements along the route, is a key part of our plans to take more freight off roads and onto rail.
“This project will help to take up to 750,000 lorry journeys off the road every year by 2030, reducing traffic congestion and carbon emissions as well as improving road safety.”
Preparatory work has already started, with major works to begin in autumn 2012. Work will be completed in early 2014.
Notes to editors
Network Rail is reforming its infrastructure business with a greater focus on partnership with suppliers and a restructuring of the way the company delivers capital projects. The changes are a key part of the company’s plans to deliver efficiency savings helping to reduce the cost of running the railway.
Improving the railway from Felixstowe to Nuneaton (Phase 1: 2009-2014) involves:
• Gauge enhancements between Peterborough and Nuneaton to ensure the entire route can carry the larger, more economical freight containers increasingly preferred by global shipping firms. It also enables freight operators to use standard wagons which are more efficient and economical.
• Capacity enhancements between Ipswich and Peterborough: (i) a new one mile stretch of track, or chord, north of Ipswich goods yard, linking the East Suffolk and Great Eastern lines (ii) two 775m sections of track east of Ely station to enable better regulation of trains through the junctions at Ely iii) signalling works at Kennett / Bury St Edmunds. These works will increase capacity between Ipswich and Peterborough from 10 container freight trains per day (tpd) to up to 24tpd in each direction by 2014, and provide passive provision for enabling 775m trains to run in future.
• The Nuneaton North Chord: a flyover north of Nuneaton station that will allow freight trains from Peterborough to join the West Coast Main Line without the need to cross it at grade.
Phase 2 (2014-2019):
The Government has confirmed a £200m investment in the Strategic Freight Network for 2014-2019, part of which the rail industry plans to use on further improvements along the Felixstowe to Nuneaton route. This includes the doubling of the track between Ely and Soham, which was announced in the Chancellor’s 2011 Autumn Statement and is planned to finish by 2016 subject to obtaining the necessary consents. The Ely loops construction in Phase 1 effectively doubles the first mile of the route between Ely and Soham – the work is being planned to make full future doubling in Phase 2 as straightforward as possible. Network Rail is developing plans for further enhancements to the railway around Ely, which could meet aspirations for both freight and passenger services.
The Felixstowe to Nuneaton freight upgrade scheme will bring the following benefits:
Vehicles off the road
The Port of Felixstowe has increased rapidly in size over the past few years. When the Felixstowe South redevelopment is completed and the new Bathside Bay container terminal has been built at Harwich around 2020, these combined Haven Ports will have more than doubled their pre-2010 capacity.This growth in freight from Haven Ports will have a major impact on transport in the area and it is estimated this scheme will enable the transfer of up to 750,000 lorry freight journeys a year by 2030 from Britain’s roads to the railway. This will help reduce carbon emissions and ease traffic congestion on the road network, particularly on the A14, where congestion is estimated to cost the region £80m each year.
Environmental
Rail is one of the most environmentally sustainable forms of transport. Rail freight produces 76% less carbon dioxide than road freight per tonne carried, so the greater transfer of freight from road to rail as a result of this scheme will significantly reduce carbon emissions and help Britain reduce its carbon footprint.
Efficiency
High cube containers are larger than standard containers, and therefore more items can be transported within them, making them a more efficient means of distributing goods. Rail can therefore be a cheaper, quicker and a more practical way for businesses to transport their goods around the country and beyond. At present high cube containers are too big to be carried on standard height platform wagons on much of the rail network. Therefore the only way to carry them by rail is on special low wagons. However, this reduces efficiency and capacity by up to 33%.
Economic growth
The upgraded rail freight link will improve the competitiveness and encourage economic growth across Britain. This project will also make it easier to import and export goods, helping Britain compete more effectively in the global market.
Further information: www.networkrail.co.uk/felixstowe-nuneaton
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