Description of high speed systems currently in use, being
Transcription
Description of high speed systems currently in use, being
SECOND TRAINING COURSE ON HIGH-SPEED SYSTEMS UIC – Paris - June 2005 Description of high speed systems currently in use, being constructed or being designed in Europe and the world: • Europe Mr Jean-Pierre Loubinoux, Director of International Development – SNCF Chairman of SNCF International Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -1- Umeå 1981: Paris – Lyon 410 1989: Le Mans – Tours Oslo Helsinki St.Petersburg Stockholm 1991: Mannheim – Stuttgart Tallinn 1991: Hannover – Würzburg Göteborg 1992: Firenze – Roma Riga 1992: Madrid – Sevilla Edinburgh Glasgow Moskva 1993: Calais – Lille København Vilnius 1994: Lyon – Valence Gdansk 1994: Channel Tunnel Hamburg Dublin Minsk 1995: Paris Junction Berlin Amsterdam 1996: Lille – Bruxelles Hann. London Warszawa 1998: Fyn – Sjæland Brux. Köln Fr. Katowice 1998: Hannover - Berlin Praha Lviv Kiev Nürnberg Lux. 2000: København – Malmö Mann. Paris Wien 2001: Valence Nîmes Marseille München Bratislava Rennes 2002: Köln Wiesbaden Frankfurt Budapest Zürich ChisinauLouvain – Liège 2002: Genève Ljubljana Milano 2003: Madrid – LLeida Lyon Bordeaux Zagreb 2006: Rome – Naples / Turin-Nova Beograd Bucuresti Bologna Genova Sarajevo Sofia Marseille 410 km Skopje Porto Madrid Barcelona Istanbul Roma High-speed line Tirana Napoli Bari Ankara Valencia Reggio di C. Lisboa Athinai Source: UIC maps, Sevilla Málaga network data Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -20 500 km Umeå 410 1981: Paris – Lyon 280 Oslo 1989: Le Mans – Tours Helsinki St.Petersburg Stockholm 99 1991: Mannheim – Stuttgart Tallinn 326 1991: Hannover – Würzburg Göteborg 246 1992: Firenze – Roma Riga 471 Edinburgh 1992: Madrid – Sevilla Glasgow Moskva 332 1993: Calais – Lille København Vilnius 122 1994: Lyon – Valence Gdansk 52 1994: Channel Tunnel Hamburg Dublin Minsk 102 Berlin 1995: Paris Junction Amsterdam 1996: Lille – Bruxelles Hann. London Warszawa Brux. 1998: Fyn – Sjæland Köln Fr. Katowice Praha 1998: Lviv Kiev Hannover - Berlin Nürnberg Lux. 2000: København – Malmö Mann. Paris Wien München Bratislava 2001: Valence Nîmes Marseille Rennes Budapest 2002: Köln Wiesbaden Frankfurt Zürich Chisinau 2002: Louvain – Liège Genève Ljubljana Milano 2003: Madrid – LLeida Lyon Bordeaux Zagreb Beograd 2006: Rome – Naples / Turin-Nova Bucuresti Bologna Genova Sarajevo Sofia Marseille 2,240 km Skopje Porto Madrid Barcelona Istanbul Roma Tirana Napoli Bari Ankara High-speed line Valencia Reggio di C. Lisboa Athinai Source: UIC maps, Sevilla Málaga network data Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -30 500 km Umeå 1981: Paris – Lyon 1989: Le Mans – Tours Oslo Helsinki St.Petersburg Stockholm 1991: Mannheim – Stuttgart Tallinn 1991: Hannover – Würzburg Göteborg 1992: Firenze – Roma Riga 1992: Madrid – Sevilla Edinburgh Glasgow Moskva 1993: Calais – Lille København Vilnius 1994: Lyon – Valence Gdansk 1994: Channel Tunnel Hamburg Dublin Minsk 1995: Paris Junction Berlin Amsterdam 1996: Lille – Bruxelles Hann. London Warszawa 1998: Fyn – Sjæland Brux. Köln Fr. Katowice 1998: Hannover - Berlin Praha Lviv Kiev Nürnberg Lux. 2000: København – Malmö Mann. Paris Wien 2001: Valence Nîmes Marseille München Bratislava Rennes 2002: Köln Wiesbaden Frankfurt Budapest Zürich ChisinauLouvain – Liège 2002: Genève Ljubljana Milano 2003: Madrid – LLeida Lyon Bordeaux Zagreb 2006: Rome – Naples / Tur-Nov Beograd Bucuresti Bologna Genova Sarajevo Sofia Marseille 4,574 km Skopje Porto Madrid Barcelona Istanbul Roma Tirana Napoli 410 280 99 326 246 471 332 122 52 102 73 15 152 18 295 219 69 470 314 Bari Ankara High-speed line Valencia Reggio di C. Lisboa Athinai Source: UIC maps, Sevilla Málaga network data Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -40 500 km Umeå 1981: Paris – Lyon 1989: Le Mans – Tours Oslo Helsinki St.Petersburg Stockholm 1991: Mannheim – Stuttgart Tallinn 1991: Hannover – Würzburg Göteborg 1992: Firenze – Roma Riga 1992: Madrid – Sevilla Edinburgh Glasgow Moskva 1993: Calais – Lille København Vilnius 1994: Lyon – Valence Gdansk 1994: Channel Tunnel Hamburg Dublin Minsk 1995: Paris Junction Berlin Amsterdam 1996: Lille – Bruxelles Hann. London Warszawa 1998: Fyn – Sjæland Brux. Köln Fr. Katowice 1998: Hannover - Berlin Praha Lviv Kiev Nürnberg Lux. 2000: København – Malmö Mann. Paris Wien 2001: Valence Nîmes Marseille München Bratislava Rennes 2002: Köln Wiesbaden Frankfurt Budapest Zürich ChisinauLouvain – Liège 2002: Genève Ljubljana Milano 2003: Madrid – Lleida Lyon Bordeaux Zagreb 2006: Rome – Naples / Tur-Nov Beograd Bucuresti Bologna Genova Sarajevo Sofia Marseille Skopje Porto Madrid Barcelona 410 280 99 326 246 471 332 122 52 102 73 15 152 18 295 219 69 470 314 Roma Projects under construction in 2006 Istanbul Tirana Napoli Bari Ankara Valencia Reggio di C. Lisboa Athinai High-speed line Line under construction Source: UIC maps, Sevilla Málaga network data Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -50 500 km Umeå 1981: Paris – Lyon Oslo 1989:St.Petersburg Le Mans – Tours Helsinki Stockholm 1991: Mannheim – Stuttgart Tallinn 1991: Hannover – Würzburg Göteborg 1992: Firenze – Roma Riga 1992: Madrid – Sevilla Edinburgh Glasgow Moskva 1993: Calais – Lille København Vilnius 1994: Lyon – Valence Gdansk 1994: Channel Tunnel Hamburg Dublin Minsk 1995: Paris Junction Berlin Amsterdam 1996: Lille – Bruxelles Hann. Warszawa London 1998: Fyn – Sjæland Brux. Köln Fr. Katowice 1998:Kiev Hannover - Berlin Praha Lviv Nürnberg Lux. 2000: København – Malmö Mann. Paris Wien 2001: Valence Nîmes Marseille München Bratislava Rennes 2002: Köln Wiesbaden Frankfurt Budapest Zürich ChisinauLouvain – Liège 2002: Genève Ljubljana 2003: Madrid – LLeida Milano Lyon Zagreb Bordeaux Beograd Bucuresti Bologna Genova Sarajevo Sofia Marseille Skopje Porto Madrid Barcelona Roma Napoli Reggio di C. Sevilla Málaga 10,000 km On the horizon for 2020 Istanbul Tirana Bari High-speed line Converted lines Classic line Ankara Valencia Lisboa 410 280 99 326 246 471 332 122 52 102 73 15 152 18 295 219 69 470 Athinai Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -60 500 km Europe – Countries • • • • • • • • France Germany Spain Italy Great Britain Belgium The Netherlands Scandanavia Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -7- France - History • Since its creation in 1981, the TGV network has been extended to cover 1,540 km • Running speed Initially travelled at 270km/h The TGV currently travels at 300km/h and at 320km/h on some stretches Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -8- France – The network • TGV trains can run on standard lines and serve any train station. • Extended links to European countries – Eurostar: England via the Channel Tunnel – Thalys: Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany – Route to Switzerland and Italy, classic line Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -9- France – The network Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -10- France – Statistics • 41.44 billion passenger-km per year (2004, with Thalys and Eurostar) 45 40 35 30 Thalys Eurostar Jonction Nord Atlantique Sud-Est 25 20 15 10 5 0 1996 2002 2003 2004 Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -11- France – Statistics • Pool of more than 400 TGV trains • Average cost of construction per km: €10m • Average cost of ticket: € 0.11/km (2nd class standard fare for a journey of more than 300km) • Electricity supply: 25,000V - 50Hz • TVM 430 Signalling system Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -12- France – Records • 1990: the TGV reached 515.3km/h • 2001: a TGV travelled the Calais – Marseille route in 3h29 – Distance: 1,067.2km – Average speed: 306.4km/h • 2003: 1st billion travellers carried by the TGV (87 million passengers carried in 2003 for the year 2003 alone) • Aim: 100 million passengers annually in 2010 Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -13- France – Projects • • • • 2007: Extension to the east: TGV Est (300 km) 2011: Extension Rhine – Rhône east (190 km) 2012: Nîmes – Montpellier bypass (70 km) 2013 - 2016: Extension to the south-west (LGV Sud Europe Atlantique (302 km) • Other projects: Brittany, PACA… • Extensions to other countries – Germany, with the extension of the LGV Est – Spain, with the construction of the mixed-use Perpignan-Figueras line (of which the 45 contracted km are to enter into service in 2009) – Italy, with the construction of the mixed-use LyonTurin line (300km) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -14- Germany – History • High-speed trains began in 1991 with the ICE train • Speed and network – 250km/h initially – 300km/h at the moment – New stock designed for 330 km/h Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -15- Germany – The network • Some high-speed stretches Completed high-speed stretches High-speed stretches planned/under construction Stretch taken by the Thalys Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -16- Germany – Statistics • 900km of high-speed track • Infrastructure designed for mixed transport (Only the Cologne – Frankfurt line is reserved solely for high-speed) • 47.6 million travellers, or 15.2 billion passenger-km per year (2002) • Pool of 160 ICE trains • Average cost of construction per km: €28m • Average ticket price (2nd class standard fare): €0.20/km • 15000V 16.7Hz • LZB Signalling system Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -17- Germany – Projects • Aim is for a network with a minimum speed of 200km/h. • Today, ICE trains run on 1,800km of track (highspeed and normal track). It is planned to increase this to 4,000km by 2015. • Construction of a bridge over the Rhine at Kehl • Several routes planned – Nuremberg Ingolstadt – Mannheim Saarbruck (entry into service in 2006) (entry into service in 2009) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -18- Spain – History • 1992: Madrid – Seville • 2003: Madrid – Lerida • Network being extended: - 950 km in use, - 500 km under construction - 550 km planned In Use Under construction Planned At study stage • Links planned for other countries: France, Portugal (Madrid- Lisbon 2013) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -19- Spain – The network • Inconsistent gauges : 1668mm for classic and 1435mm for high-speed lines • Running speed: – 300km/h on some stretches of the MadridSeville route – 220km/h on Madrid-Lérida (waiting for the ERTMS, track and new rolling stock designed for 350km/h) • Variety of rolling stock Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -20- Spain – Statistics • • • • • 950km of high-speed track 2 billion passenger-km per year (2001) Pool to have 120 high-speed trains in the future Average cost of construction per km: €27m Average ticket price (2nd class standard fare): €0.20/km • The main strength of the AVE: the quality of the on-board service • 25,000V 50Hz • Level 2 ERTMS signalling in process Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -21- Italy – History Bern - Zürich Lyon Innsbruck - München Ljubljana • 1992: Historic RomeFlorence axis “Direttissima” (line in use since 1978, with updates) • 246km to 250km/h • Tilting technology • 3,000V • 15.1 billion passenger-km per year (2001) Line in use Line under construction Line at planning stage Line at study stage Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -22- Italy - Characteristics • Relaunch of high-speed: the Alta Velocita projects – 700km in operation & under construction (Rome – Naples 2006, Turin – Novara 2006, Novara - Milan, Milan - Bologne – Florence) – 230km at study stage – 250km/h (track and new rolling stock designed for 300km/h) – 25,000V • Links planned for other countries: France, Germany, Slovenia, Switzerland • Pool to have 120 high-speed trains in future • ERTMS signalling planned Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -23- Belgium • Thalys is the undisputed market leader of the Brussels-Paris route. • Eurostar links Brussels to London, via Lille and the Channel Tunnel. • The TGV network provides direct links between Brussels and the main tourist destinations in France. • A high-speed line between Louvain and Liege has been in servcie since 2002 • Since December 2002, German ICE trains have provided a daily link between Brussels and Frankfurt via Liege and Cologne. Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -24- Belgium – Characteristics • Running of: Thalys ParisBrussels Amsterdam Thalys ParisBrussels KölnAmsterdam ICE 25,000V 50Hz 3,000V DC 1,500V DC 25,000V 50Hz 3,000V DC 1,500V DC 15,000V 16.7Hz • 150km of high-speed track • 0.9 billion passenger-km per year (2001) • 3,000V • TBL signalling system Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -25- Belgium – Projects • High-speed extension to Cologne (2006) • High-speed extension to Amsterdam (2007) • Extension to Luxembourg (planned) Under construction Planned Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -26- Great Britain • The Eurostar serves London from Paris and Brussels via the Channel Tunnel • The CTRL1 section (2003): speeds of 300 km/h Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -27- Great Britain • Construction of CTRL2 (gaining 20 min) (2007) • High-speed service to and from Kent – – – – – First regional high-speed service in the world London – Stratford – Ebbsfleet – Ashford line Serves other towns in the region (Canterbury, etc.) Regional trains travel at 225km/h Operated under contract (2008) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -28- Great Britain – Statistics • 100km of high-speed track • 0.8 billion passenger-km per year (2001) • Pool of 31 Eurostar trains • Average cost of construction per km: €27m • Average ticket price (2nd class standard fare): €0.44/km • 750V (3rd rail supply) • AWS signalling system Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -29- The Netherlands • Currently, Thalys serves Amsterdam • HSL Project: Creation of a new 100km line linking Amsterdam and Rotterdam to the Belgium border Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -30- The Netherlands – The HSL Project Future line to run alongside existing infrastructure (motorways, rail tracks) and be linked to the existing network. A 3-part construction: – Six contracts for the planning and construction of the earthworks and civil engineering structures ( approx. €3bn). – Infrastructure contract. A public private partnership for the track, energy supply, telecommunications and signalling (approx. €1.5bn). – Operating contract. Also a public private partnership (€0.5bn). ⇒ High Speed Alliance (HSA – NS/KLM consortium) ⇒ Tolls will be based on the number of train journeys ⇒ Collaboration foreseen for the SNCB/NMBS (Belgium) and the SNCF (France) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -31- The Netherlands – The HSL project • • • • ERTMS signalling Supply 25,000V 300km/h 75% civil engineering structures (170 structures): tunnels (one of 7km), underwater tunnels, major bridges, etc • Cost of 5bn euros • Opening in April 2007 • Stations served: Amsterdam, Schiphol Airport, Rotterdam, The Hague and Breda. Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -32- Operators • National operators SNCF RENFE FS (France) (Spain) (Italy) SNCB (Belgium) DB (Germany) NS (Netherlands) • Partnerships Thalys (SNCF – SNCB) Eurostar (SNCF – SNCB – EUKL) Future alliance SNCF DB • Private contracts HSL (NS – KLM) (Operating) Perpignan - Figueras (For infrastructure) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -33- Comparison France Germany Spain Italy United Kingdom Belgium Km of dedicated track 1,540 900 950 250 100 150 Km of running track 7,000 1,800 950 n.a. 100 470 Passenger-km/year (in billions) 41.4 15.2 2 15.1 0.8 0.9 Pool (number of trains) 400 160 120 120 31 10 28 27 n.a. 27 Average cost of construction (€m) n.a. Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -34- Supply – Signalling France 25,000V HS Compatibility 1,500V 50Hz TVM DC Germany HS 15,000V 16.7Hz LZB Spain HS 25,000V 50Hz LZB/ERTMS HS Compatibility 25,000V 50Hz ERTMS 3,000V DC HS Compatibility 25,000V 50Hz TVM 1,500V DC TBL2 HS Compatibility 25,000V 50Hz TVM 750V DC ATP 25,000V 50Hz ERTMS 1,500V DC ATB Italy Belgium UK NetherlandsHS Compatibility Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -35- The issue of interoperability • Signalling – Each country has its own signalling system – TVM (France, England, Belgium) – LZB (Germany and Spain) – ERTMS, a European standard, currently under development • • • • Rail gauges Bend radii and cants Electricity supply But also other questions (height of platforms, emergency coupling, linguistic questions, etc) Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -36- Europe Estimated development of high-speed lines Km 12,000 10,000 average: 370km/year 8,000 6,000 4,000 average: 170km/year 2,000 2019 2017 2015 2013 2011 2009 2007 2005 2003 2001 1999 1997 1995 1993 1991 1989 1987 1985 1983 1981 0 Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -37- Training on High Speed Systems, 19.6.2006 -38-