Adlington
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- 3 Oct 2016
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An interesting article in the Economist, unfortunately behind a paywall. Here are the crucial (IMHO) points:
At the end of a branch railway line that winds through wooded valleys in central France, a single carriage pulls into the little town of Ussel. The station has scarcely changed since it was built in 1880. Passengers still step over the rails to cross to the platform opposite. Clumps of grass and tall weeds sprout between the tracks.
To reach Ussel by railway from Paris, 480km (300 miles) away, there is no high-speed option. The journey can take nearly seven hours, with a change at Brive-la-Gaillarde. In the same amount of time, thanks to France’s superb network of high-speed trains (TGV), it is possible to zip all the way from the capital to Marseille on the Mediterranean—and back.
Four decades of pouring money into the TGV has taught France another lesson, and not only about the vast cost of building and operating these lines. It is that linking lucky hyper-connected cities to the capital has left swathes of the country at the mercy of poorly maintained railways, fostering a sense of abandonment. The TGV network has helped to create a “two-speed France”: superfast non-stop trains for those who can afford them; second-rate, slower trains for the rest.
On some secondary lines the service is worse today than in the past. Two non-TGV lines running north-south through central France have been particularly neglected: one between Paris and Clermont-Ferrand, the other between Paris and Toulouse, which passes through Brive and Limoges. The railway carriages running on the latter are veritable museum pieces, designed in the 1970s. Today it takes half an hour longer to travel from Limoges to Paris than it did back then.
The French government recently decided to switch track. As part of President Emmanuel Macron’s push to cut carbon emissions, it wants more people on the railways and fewer behind the wheel. But it knows that such a strategy cannot be based only on fast trains. “The TGV is a source of pride, and for a lot of big cities has been a motor for economic development,” says Clément Beaune, the transport minister. “But we have underinvested in certain other lines. For me that’s now a priority.” The government is putting €3bn into renovating these two non-TGV lines, and buying new trains. It has relaunched slow night trains on long routes.