Rail Partners report says freight operators are ready to support decarbonisation and economic growth in partnership …

Rail Partners[1] says that its freight operator members are ready to invest in improving and further decarbonising rail freight, providing the Government can deliver the conditions to grow the market to enable the market to grow. A report launched today (Monday 4 March) outlines how operators will work in partnership with Government to deliver the economic and environmental benefits of freight, through investment in trains, its workforce, and new technologies. Rail Partners' report 'Freight Britain: An engine for green growth' follows a commitment from the Department for Transport to grow rail freight by no less than 75 per cent by 2050.

The report offers a route to delivering on that target - and securing the benefits freight brings to the economy and the environment. Advertisement Today, rail freight already contributes GBP2.45bn to the UK economy, with 90 per cent of those benefits accrued outside of London and the South East.

As a result of recent investment in longer and heavier freight services, a single train can now remove up to 129 lorries from roads. As well as reducing congestion, transporting freight by rail produces 76 per cent less carbon per tonne compared to road, helping to meet wider environmental objectives and get lorries off roads. Growing rail freight by 75 per cent would take 12 million HGV movements off roads every year.

However, rail freight is facing a series of challenges including a widening gap between the cost of rail compared to road. Rail network access charges for freight have risen sharply since 2010, while road costs have been kept down as duty on fuel has been frozen since 2014. Freight operating companies are actively looking for opportunities to invest in growing the sector.

Under the right conditions, they would commit significant resources into procuring greener rolling stock, building new and improved freight facilities across the network, and in people through driving more innovation creating more high-skilled jobs. The report details five priority policy interventions that would create those conditions, giving rail freight operating companies the confidence to invest, and - in partnership with government - grow the rail freight sector:

  • Address the widening gap between road and rail costs to create a level playing field between freight modes. Make rail an affordable choice within a price sensitive freight and logistics sector by considering tax and incentives across modes.
  • Maintain and expand already successful grant schemes to remove more lorries from roads.

    Further support modal shift to rail by expanding successful incentives like the Mode Shift Revenue Support scheme, which already removes 900,000 HGV movements from roads, and the Freight Facilities Grant, which works well in Scotland and could be expanded to the whole of Britain.

  • Offer long term access to the rail network. Give businesses the confidence to invest in rail freight facilities, and technology, by offering certainty around future access rights to the railway.
  • Provide reliable infrastructure necessary to support rail freight growth. Create space for more freight services by both maximising use of existing capacity and making clear commitments to new infrastructure.
  • Deliver a reformed railway.

    Create a Strategic Freight Unit within any new arm's length body to ensure freight is adequately represented. A new public body should also have a statutory duty to promote rail freight, safeguard operators and ensure freight is sufficiently prioritised.

Andy Bagnall, chief executive, Rail Partners, said: "Rail freight operators want to invest in better, greener trains and freight facilities, to do so they need government to work in partnership with them and create a favourable environment for growth. That means providing confidence around access to the network and investment in capacity, and commitments to support rail freight as a critical step towards wider environmental targets and net zero.

"Increasing rail freight services has the backing of all the main parties, so government should have the confidence to invest in tangible support, from targeted infrastructure investment to the right incentives to encourage customers to switch to rail, helping to decarbonise supply chains." John Smith, chief executive officer, GB Railfreight and chair of Rail Partners' Freight Council, said: "In recent years freight operating companies have invested in facilities, talent and rolling stock to prepare ourselves for the transition to net zero. Collectively, we as an industry are able to help the UK decarbonise its supply chains and in doing so remove HGVs from our road network, which will benefit the wider country.

"With small interventions from government that provide long-term stability, further private sector investment can be unlocked that will drive the growth of rail freight across the country."

Download article[2]

References

  1. ^ Rail Partners (railpartners.co.uk)
  2. ^ Download article (news.railbusinessdaily.com)