Is the US finally getting ‘all aboard’ with electric trains?

bnew

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Is the US finally getting ‘all aboard’ with electric trains?​


Two new electric trains in California could be a sign that the notoriously laggard US is finally ready to catch up to the rest of the world.​


By Andrew J. Hawkins, transportation editor with 10+ years of experience who covers EVs, public transportation, and aviation. His work has appeared in The New York Daily News and City & State.
Aug 12, 2024, 10:39 AM EDT

Caltrain’s new electric trains

Image: Caltrain

For the first time, California has two new all-electric commuter trains operating along a major corridor. It could be a sign that the US is finally ready to catch up to the rest of the world in electrifying its rolling stock.

The two new trains are operated by Caltrain. California Governor Gavin Newson and House Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi were on hand to take the inaugural ride, which took place on Saturday. The trains were put into regular service the following day, running along the route between San Jose and San Francisco.

It’s taken almost 20 years since the idea of electric trains was first proposed in California. But officials insisted the new trains will be quieter and faster than the diesel-powered trains in current operation while also providing a better experience for passengers. The two trains will be joined by 17 others that should be in service by mid-September.

The US is woefully behind the rest of the world in electrifying its rolling stock
Caltrain said the new trains will be 20 percent faster because they can accelerate and decelerate more efficiently than diesel trains. The new trains will also help make life easier for the people who live along the rail corridor by reducing air and noise pollution.

It shouldn’t come as any shock that the US is lagging behind the rest of the world in introducing electric trains. While plenty of light rail lines operate using electric power, almost all of the nation’s heavy rail lines run on diesel fuel.

India is on the cusp of electrifying 100 percent of its rail lines, while China is nearing three-quarters of its network. Over 57 percent of the rail system in the European Union is electric. The US, which has historically prioritized personal cars over high-volume passenger trains, now can boast that it has two electric trains — and more on the way.

CalTrain_EMU_VIP_LOW_RES_96.jpg

Image: Caltrain

The reasons for this extremely slow adoption are plentiful, but one of the most glaring problems is opposition from the Association of American Railroads, the industry’s main lobbying organization. The group says it would be extremely costly to retrofit the rail system in the US for electric trains, especially since so much of the current track system is built to accommodate diesel engines. These costs outweigh the possible benefits of an electric-powered rail system.

It even issued a policy paper (that is now conspicuously missing from the group’s website) laying out the case against railroad electrification. The existential threat of climate change is not enough to change the minds of the nation’s rail executives.

And it’s not like the problem isn’t obvious. US railroads are some of the largest consumers of diesel fuel, slurping up some 4.2 billion gallons in 2018 alone. Some experts have cited railroad monopolization as a primary reason electrification efforts keep getting waylaid. The major operators — CSX and Norfolk Southern in the east, and BNSF and Union Pacific in the west — “fastidiously opposed to deploying capital that would improve infrastructure. As a result, they are unwilling to fund electrification and focus on cutting costs and services in order to reap higher profits,” Maddock Thomas wrote in the Brown Political Review last year.

State-operated commuter rail has an opportunity to seize the zeitgeist and do the right thing in the absence of cooperation from the freight operators. The new Caltrain models are just a drop in the bucket but should go a long way in proving that electric trains can be a win for the community as well as a win for the environment.
 

Canada Goose

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Isnt trains by nature electric already...AMtrack, MTA...:patrice:
Amtrak is only electric in the Northeast Corrdior, rest of the Amtrak system is diesel.


The subway and light rail systems in the U.S are entirely electric but the freight trains, commuter rail and Amtrak outside the NEC are mostly diesel.
 

ORDER_66

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Amtrak is only electric in the Northeast Corrdior, rest of the Amtrak system is diesel.


The subway and light rail systems in the U.S are entirely electric but the freight trains, commuter rail and Amtrak outside the NEC are mostly diesel.

I see...:francis: there's a good reason for that... I'm sure...:mjgrin: america doesnt have that infrastructure like other nations to do all electric rail in these places...and that's kinda by design... america spends too much on it's war machine to GAF :mjlol:
 

Hoodoo Child

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Brother, nothings going to happen. We've had EPCMs champing at the bit for capital projects like these for 30 years.

China connected the whole country from 2012 til now. Texas can't even connect Houston and Dallas...despite it being a perfect, literally perfect, HSR project.
Airline industry got this country by the balls :francis:
 

maxamusa

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Amtrak is only electric in the Northeast Corrdior, rest of the Amtrak system is diesel.


The subway and light rail systems in the U.S are entirely electric but the freight trains, commuter rail and Amtrak outside the NEC are mostly diesel.


Metro North is electric.
 
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