How Innovation is Helping to Meet the Challenges
A 2022 Boston Consultancy Group article highlights the sustainability advantages of rail travel, along with some of the challenges it is facing.
While investment in infrastructure remains a significant challenge, there is a growing recognition of the need for investment in rail from regions and institutions that have given it a lower priority in the past.
A 2021 Rapid Transition Alliance article on low carbon railways in India reported that, while only 30% of the world’s railways were electric in 2021, with regions such as North and South America and the UK historically showing lower levels of investment, other regions like Europe and Japan were close to full electrification, with China and India developing rapidly. In July 2021, the US Senate approved a $66 billion investment in rail infrastructure, demonstrating how countries that have not previously prioritized rail investment are working to catch up.
For now, though, the majority of rolling stock worldwide is still diesel-powered, leaving a gap that innovation is starting to narrow. OEMs are already investing in R&D for new developments in electrification.
Providers such as WSP in the USA and Siemens globally are working with transit companies to drive efficient and cost-effective line electrification.
Others are innovating to make rail transport more sustainable without the heavy investment needed for full electrification.
Rolls-Royce has collaborated with rolling stock provider Porterbrook to deliver a hybrid train solution that pairs a diesel engine with a battery which stores power from braking to deliver a hybrid locomotive that reduces CO2 emissions and fuel consumption by up to 25%.
Alstom delivered the first fuel-cell powered train into commercial service in 2018, using a hydrogen fuel cell to deliver power to the batteries that provide its motive force.