Home ›› 23 Nov 2021 ›› World Biz
As host of the recent COP26 climate summit, Britain’s drive to help slash global carbon emissions will involve keeping to its own target of phasing out diesel trains over the next two decades, industry bodies and observers say.
According to the latest government data, about 29 per cent of the UK train fleet still runs on diesel and freight trains run almost entirely on it.
On Thursday, the government unveiled plans to electrify an additional 180 miles (288 kilometres) of track in a new rail strategy.
This would help “to meet the ambition of removing all diesel-only trains from the network by 2040”, the Department for Transport said.
Diesel dependence
While electric trains emit 60 per cent less carbon than their diesel counterparts, only 42 per cent of the UK rail network is currently electrified, according to official data.
That places the UK far behind European neighbours, such as the Netherlands, where 76 per cent of the network is electrified.
With the current surge in electricity prices, some electric-run operators have recently been forced to revert to diesel locomotives, trade body Rail Freight Group (RFG) observed last month.
While the RFG described the switch back to diesel as “regrettable”, it insisted it was only temporary.
Its director general, Maggie Simpson, highlighted a need for “more electric wires to support the investment in newer locomotives”.
Britain’s rail freight is presently 90 per cent hauled by diesel engines.
“Of course, in the long term, we need to move to a decarbonised economy, so more use of electric traction is going to be a huge part of that,” Simpson told AFP.
Last month saw the launch of a new fully-electric passenger train in the UK -- Lumo’s London-Edinburgh service carries no auxiliary diesel engine.
Train operators are taking the opportunity to transition also via hybrid models in much the same way as carmakers.
Chiltern Railways, which runs passenger services between London in southeast England and the country’s Midlands, recently announced investment in a hybrid battery-diesel train, developed by rolling stock owner Porterbrook and Rolls-Royce, the maker of aircraft engines.