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Planned high-speed rail by country - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Planned high-speed rail by country

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article provides of planned or proposed High-speed rail projects, listed by country. High-speed rail is public transport by rail at speeds in excess of 200 km/h (125 mph).[1] For details of proposed or planned extensions or upgrades to existing high-speed rail networks, or details of current high-speed rail networks, see high-speed rail by country.

Contents

[edit] Europe

See also High-speed rail in Europe

Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK already have high-speed rail networks. Many others are building or are considering high-speed links.

[edit] North America

[edit] Canada

The Turbo was North America's first major experiment with high-speed railways. Here it is seen leaving Montreal in 1973.
The Turbo was North America's first major experiment with high-speed railways. Here it is seen leaving Montreal in 1973.

High-speed rail in Canada is more a case of hope than reality. Canada placed some early hopes with the United Aircraft Turbo train, in the 1960s. The train sets achieved speeds as high as 200 km/h (125 mph) in regular service, but for most of its service life (marred with lengthy interruptions to address design problems), it ran at a more realistic 160 km/h (100 mph).

Beginning in the 1970s, a consortium of several companies started to study the Bombardier LRC, which was a more conventional approach to high-speed rail, in having separate cars rather than being an articulated train. Pulled by heavy conventional-technology diesel-electric locomotives designed for 200 km/h (125 mph) normal operating speed, it entered full-scale service in 1981 for VIA Rail, linking cities in the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor, but at speeds never exceeding the 170 km/h (106 mph) limit mandated by line signalling.

In 1998, the Lynx consortium, including Bombardier and SNC-Lavalin proposed a 300 km/h (186 mph) high-speed train named the Jet-Train from Toronto to Quebec City via Montreal based on the TGV and the French Turbo-Train technology. Recently, Bombardier and VIA have proposed high-speed services along the Quebec City-Windsor Corridor using Bombardier's experimental JetTrain tilting trains, which are similar to Bombardier's Acela Express, but powered by a gas turbine engine rather than overhead electric wires. These trains resemble the first TGV prototype (TGV001) powered by a gas turbine that were tested on the Strasbourg-Mulhouse line. As yet, no government support for this plan has been forthcoming, and Bombardier continues promoting the JetTrain especially for Texas and Florida routes.

Bombardier has also recently promoted high-speed rail in the province of Alberta between Edmonton and Calgary. On September 22, 2006, it was announced the Provincial government was deploying video cameras along a stretch of the Queen Elizabeth II Highway as to help determine the merits of building the Calgary/Red Deer/Edmonton link. Further driver surveys will better help understand the nature of the 50,000 car trips between the 3 cities [1].

[edit] United States

This map from 2001 shows a number of proposed high-speed routes in the U.S.
This map from 2001 shows a number of proposed high-speed routes in the U.S.

The United States placed some early hopes in high-speed trains with the Acela, Acela runs at between 75 mph (120 km/h) and 150 mph (241 km/h), Acela Express (often called simply Acela, leading to early confusion with the Acela Regional and Acela Commuter) is the name used by Amtrak for the high-speed tilting train service operating between Washington, D.C. and Boston via New York City and Philadelphia along the Northeast Corridor (NEC) in the Northeast United States. The tilting design allows the train to travel at higher speeds on the sharply curved NEC without disturbing passengers by lowering lateral G-forces. Acela Express trains are the only true high-speed trainsets in the United States. This has made the trains very popular, and by some reckoning, Amtrak has captured over half of the market share of travelers between Washington and New York.[2] Outside of stations, Acela runs at between 75 mph (120 km/h) and 150 mph (241 km/h), depending on track conditions.

It is possible to trace the development of high-speed railways back to the streamliners that criss-crossed the U.S. in the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s which, in turn, can be traced further back to the competing companies operating different routes between London and Scotland, and to railways in Germany and France. There has been a resurgence of interest in recent decades, with many plans being examined for high-speed rail across the country, relegated to Amtrak's Northeast Corridor between Boston and Washington, D.C. (the service covers New York City and Philadelphia).

In 2002, the Texas High Speed Rail & Transportation Corporation [2] (THSRTC), a grass roots organization dedicated to bringing high speed rail to Texas was established. In 2006, American Airlines and Continental Airlines formally joined THSRTC, in an effort to bring high speed rail to Texas as a passenger collector system for the airlines.

The California High Speed Rail Authority was created in 1996 by the state to implement an extensive 700 mile (1127 km) rail system. Construction is pending approval of the voters during the November 2008 general election, in which a $9 billion state bond would have to be approved. If built, the system would provide a TGV-style high-speed link between the state's four major cities (Sacramento, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego), and would allow travel between Los Angeles' Union Station and San Francisco's Transbay Terminal in two and a half hours.

[edit] Mexico

The Secretariat of Communications and Transport of Mexico at one time was planning a high-speed rail link that would transport its passengers from Mexico City to Guadalajara, Jalisco with stops in the cities of Querétaro, Leon and Irapuato. The train would have allowed passengers to travel from Mexico City to Guadalajara in just 3 hours at an affordable price (the same trip by road would last 5 hours). IThe whole project was projected to cost 120 billion pesos, or about 12 billion dollars. Some Mexican politicians such as Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador suggested a whole national network of such lines, however there were objections from others who believed that Mexico's limited resources would be better spent on shorter rail segments serving more passengers, such as the Tren Suburbano in Mexico City. Expansion of low-cost airlines such as Volaris, Interjet, Click Mexicana in Mexico has also tended to dampen enthusiasism for this proposal.

[edit] South America

[edit] Argentina

Argentina (see TAVe) is projected to build the first dedicated high-speed rail line in the Americas[3] operating at speeds of 320 km/h (200 mph), construction is scheduled to begin in 2008, work is expected to take around four years. The project will join the cities of Buenos Aires and Rosario at a distance of 286 km (178 miles) and Cordoba at a distance of 710 km (441 mi) [4].

Other projected high speed rail lines include:

  • Buenos Aires-Mendoza (1200 km [750mi]) (Planned) [6].

[edit] Brazil

Plans for the (280 km/h) line linking Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Campinas are still being mulled over. The line would be more than 400 km long, and designed to cover the distance in 1.5 hrs. The price for an individual ticket is estimated at 130 reais (around 66 U.S. dollars). According to Italplan, the project will demand an investment of 9 billion dollars. If the public bidding process takes place in 2008, the railway is expected to start operating in 2015.[7]

[edit] Australia

Australia has no high-speed trains. The Transwa Prospector operating between Perth and Kalgoorlie is capable of reaching 210 km/h (130 mph) however operates at 160 km/h (100 mph) due to track limitations. Queensland Rail's electric Tilt Train between Brisbane, Rockhampton and Cairns is the fastest narrow gauge railway in the world at record breaking speeds of 210 km/h (130.4 mph). The service to Cairns is a diesel tilt train, as the line is not electrified. The VLocity Vline operating from Melbourne to Traralgon, Geelong, Bendigo and Ballarat is capable of , and limited to, 160 km/h (100 mph).

The development of Australia's railways has always been hampered by the country's low population density; it has a population comparable to a small European country such as the Netherlands yet occupies an area only slightly smaller than the mainland United States. With the consequent deregulation and intense competition in the domestic airline industry, the cheapest method of travel between the major population centres is by air.

Plans to establish a very fast train like a TGV service between Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney and Brisbane have been contemplated [8][9], but not implemented by both government and private enterprise, as various proposals have not been deemed economically viable.[10][11][12]

[edit] Asia

[edit] India

Some projects have been developed within medium and long-term time frames. They include lines radiating from New Delhi to Amritsar, Jaipur, Agra, Lucknow and Kanpur; Mumbai to Ahmedabad; Calcutta to Dhanbad; Chennai to Bangalore and Mysore; and Chennai to Hyderabad, Vijayawada, and Visakhapatnam. These 'Shatabdi'-class trains are usually non-stop and can reach a maximum speed of 140 km/h (88 mph), thus higher speed but not "high speed rail".

Japan's trade minister has pledged Japan's cooperation with India to create a high speed link in India between New Delhi and Mumbai.[13]. This was agreed during the Indian Prime Minister's visit to Japan in December, 2006.

India has also invited global bidding for construction of bullet trains on Amritsar to Delhi via Chandigarh/Mohali, Ambala, Ludhiana and Jalandhar. Besides Delhi-Amritsar route, the Railways have decided to conduct pre-feasibility studies for four more high speed passenger routes. They are Pune-Mumbai-Ahmedabad, Hyderabad-Dornakal-Vijaywada-Chennai, Chennai-Bangalore-Coimbatore-Ernakulam and Howrah-Haldia.

[edit] Iran

There is one high-speed rail line project in Iran, between Tehran and Isfahan, as well as Gorgan to Mashhad, and from Qom to Tehran. On April 16, 2007, Iran signed a 6.7 billion Euro MOU with Germany for construction of a maglev line from Tehran to Mashad.

[edit] Israel

Israel has no high-speed trains. A new rail line between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, cutting travel time between the two cities to 28 minutes (currently about 75 minutes), is under construction by Israel Railways and expected to begin service in 2012. In addition, the entire railway system is currently undergoing extensive upgrades and electrification, so that by early in the next decade, all three major metropolitan areas (Haifa, Jerusalem, and Beer Sheva) which are located outside the center of the country will be reachable within about thirty to forty minutes of Tel Aviv.

[edit] Japan

A Japanese consortium led by the Central Japan Railway Company have been researching new high-speed rail systems based on magnetic levitation since the 1970s. Although the trains and guideways are technologically ready and over 100,000 people have ridden them, high costs remains as barriers. Test trains JR-Maglev MLX01 on the Yamanashi Test Line have reached speeds of 581 km/h (361 mph) (crewed), making them the fastest trains in the world. These new maglev trains are intended to be deployed on new Tokyo – Osaka Shinkansen maglev route, called the Chuo Shinkansen. 2025 has been selected as a deadline for Nagoya - Tokyo maglev operation.

Conventional steel-wheeled Shinkansen trains running at speeds of up to 320 km/h (200 mph) will be introduced around 2011 by JR East when the Tohoku Shinkansen extension is opened to Shin-Aomori. These trains will be based on the experimental Fastech 360 trains currently undergoing testing at speeds up to 405 km/h (251 mph). The Fastech trains are speed ready (360 km/h or 223 mph) already, but problems with noise pollution (tunnel boom) and excessive overhead line wear, rail wear, etc places limits to future speed increases. The end of railed Shinkansen in Japan is already foreseen by operational limitations.

[edit] Malaysia-Singapore

There is a bullet train project at 300 km/h (186 mph) proposed to link Kuala Lumpur and Singapore, proposed by current operator KLIA Express YTL Corporation, which links Kuala Lumpur with the KLIA. It would be the first transborder high speed line outside of Europe if built. Travel time would be 90 minutes, compared with 4 hours of highway drive, 7 hours currently by standard rail, 2 hours of flight including commuting to and from airport, check in and boarding. Talks of a Bangkok Singapore line spanning the 3 nations have been suggested previously, though no action has been taken.

Plans for project was shelved due to high cost that the government has to bear. The project also faces opposition from rivals suchs as Keretapi Tanah Melayu.

[edit] Pakistan

The cities of Rawalpindi and Lahore will be getting an upgrade to a high speed rail track with trains reaching speeds up to 200 km/h (124 mph). Currently this track is capable of reaching a top speed of 100 km/h (62 mph). A direct train between Lahore and Karachi will commence operations from July 26, 2006 and will reach a top speed of 140 km/h (87 mph) and will be equipped with VHF walkie-talkies. Pakistan railways have laid all welded new and heavier rails fixed with latest fastenings to upgrade the track. Currently, the government is in negotiations with German companies to start high speed trains for the Lahore-Karachi and Karachi-Islamabad route.

[edit] Saudi Arabia

A high-speed rail project is under study from Mecca to Medina through Jeddah. See also Saudi Landbridge Project.

[edit] Vietnam

Vietnam Railways are planning a 1,630 km (1,010 miles) high-speed link from its capital Hanoi in the north, and second city Ho Chi Minh City in the south, capable of running at 250 to 300 km/h (155 to 186 mph). The funding of the $33 billion line will mostly come from the Vietnamese government, with the help of Japanese aid.[14] The current single track line has journey times from just under thirty hours[15] , and initially (2013) this would be cut to less than nine hours. From there, a speedup to 5 hours (300 km/h or 186 mph max) by 2025 is planned. The Vietnamese prime minister has set a target of completing the line by 2013, just six years, sooner than the previously announced nine year construction time.[16] These new rail lines will be the standard gauge of 1.435 m (the existing line is a narrow gauge of 1.000 m)[17]

[edit] Africa

[edit] Algeria

The SNTF has plans for following lines. These new lines will connect Oran to Annaba while passing through Algiers, Setif, and Constantine, and will reach the borders of Morroco and Tunisia. These lines will connect also certain cities of the desert including Ghardaïa, Touggourt, and Hassi Messaoud, with the new trains traveling at a mean velocity of 250 km/h (155 mph).

(startup envisaged between 2009 and 2010)

[edit] South Africa

South Africa's 80 km Gautrain is expected to run 180 km/h (112 mph) in 2010 and could be upgraded later 20 km/h (12 mph) faster to become "high speed".

[edit] Morocco

Work by ONCF could begin in 2007 from Marrakech to Tangier in the north via Marrakesh to Agadir in the south, and from Casablanca on the Atlantic to Oujda on the Algerian border. If the plans are approved, the 1,500 kilometres of track may take until 2030 to complete at a cost of around 25 billion dirhams ($2.87 billion). Casablanca to Marrakesh could be cut to 1 hour and 20 minutes from over three hours, and from the capital Rabat to Tangier to 1 hour and 30 minutes from 4 hours and 30 minutes. [18] In late 2007 a contract was signed with a consortium led by Alstom to build a high-speed railway between Kenitra and Tangier.

[edit] Standards

All the above high speed lines are 25 kV AC (except for Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Sweden which use 15 kV) and use standard gauge, even where the national gauge is different (except in Russia and Finland). This will enhance interoperability should high speed lines in different countries meet.

[edit] References


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