I think you could have chosen a better car to be almost certain of its emissions than a decade old Volkswagen!
Only using what I have to hand! My 10 year old Golf will do 65-70mpg with 4 on board on a long trip.
I think you could have chosen a better car to be almost certain of its emissions than a decade old Volkswagen!
Obviously it depends on the exact circumstances, and as such that statement should probably have been prefixed by "can be"That's often said, but where's the proof?
50 families of 4 is 200 people which is a similar seating capacity to a 4 car voyager, but the voyager can also accommodate dozens of standing passengers as well...Depends on the car, and the train. But 50 families of four in, say, 50 diesel decade old VW Golfs would almost certainly produce fewer pollutants and less CO2 than a fully loaded 4 car Voyager on a similar Journey.
Only using what I have to hand! My 10 year old Golf will do 65-70mpg with 4 on board on a long trip.
So what? (sorry, bad habit caught from a former boss). The only conclusion I can draw (see the figures in post #178) is that train (even an ageing DEMU) is better from an emissions point of view if travelling by yourself or with one other, but with four-up there isn't much difference. Of course if you take a modern electric train the emissions will be a lot lower - as they will with an electric car. However the train will win in that situation because the losses in charging and discharging a battery are mvery significant
Four of us drove from London to Sheffield and back earlier this year in a small petrol car. I used an emissions calculator which showed that this was better than the train emissions wise - possibly because it's a diesel route on the MML. For London to Manchester I would expect the train to win.
How can driving a car be better than using the train and not driving a car? The train is still operating whether you use it or not.
An empty train will consume less fuel than a fully loaded one though.How can driving a car be better than using the train and not driving a car? The train is still operating whether you use it or not.
But when the number wishing to fly gets below a certain threshold the route becomes uneconomic, the flight gets cancelled and the emissions are zero.You can make the same argument for domestic flying...
But when the number wishing to fly gets below a certain threshold the route becomes uneconomic, the flight gets cancelled and the emissions are zero.
You can make the same argument for domestic flying...
An empty train will consume less fuel than a fully loaded one though.
Unless demand gets so high from families that more rolling stock has to be procured. However the extra emissions from longer rolling stock will be far less than the equivalent number of car seats on the road.I'm not convinced about the four in a car being as good or better than the train from an emissions perspective. Driving involves using another vehicle, whereas going the train doesn't, because the train is already transporting a load of other people. The more people that use trains, the less people are using roads, which reduces traffic congestion and increases free flowing traffic, which is more energy efficient that start-stop traffic.
That rather depends on how often the train stops, and how long for!
My point was more general - that the reality of train travel for many is not what is described: it's packed commuter trains where if you are lucky you get an ironing-board seat, but may well end up standing. Even on a long-distance train, you are inceasingly likely to have hard, uncomfortable seats and no buffet, so any catering is dependant on whehter / when the trolley puts in an appearance.
Surely not ! I have previously voiced dissatisfaction about the hard seats and absence of buffets on new trains. A trolley that is often hiding, or static, or in the other portion of the train is a very poor substitute for a proper buffet.
There seemed to be a widely held view that no one wants a buffet these days, and that only few old dinosaurs like me feel that intercity services should have a buffet, padded seats, and other luxuries.
Most cities and towns now have a station
You don't have to worry about your drive belts snapping under your bonnet
Take Norwich. 1 station, 1-2 miles from much of the city. If you're heading for the 50 hectares around the station that's fine, if you're heading for the other 1200 it's not.
It's not 1970. I've been on more broken down trains than cars in the last 20 years.
It makes sense to the country for the train to capture single-passenger journeys in a car - as has been pointed
Can the incentives be improved?
In my experience on the WCML, of single passengers
those travelling 500m of station to London for one off business travel will travel by train
those travelling 500m of station to 500m of station in city-centre for commuting in peak hours travel by train
those travelling 500m of station to London will travel by train
those commuting to London in peak hours will travel by train
those travelling to London from outside of the 500m range (or often inside it) of non-direct stations will drive to an intercity railhead (Wilmslow, Crewe, Wigan)
Cost isn't that much of a factor for those groups, although leisure passengers will travel on the busier trains as they are cheaper. The peak trains into Manchester/Liverpool are already full, so the railway can't really get more people onto those. Cancelling the peak cliff on the WCML would spread the load a little, but HS2 is the best thing for more capacity in general.
Aside from ensuring decent connections I'm not sure what more the railway can do to incentivize travellers without major capacity and service increases, and one person's "decent connections" doesn't work for another.
For couples, getting rid of the two-together and just issuing a ticket for two people would be helpful, but the 4 hour wait for a train on a Sunday evening before 4 hours of people cram onto a single-car 158 is also important. Maybe throw in "kids travel for free with parent off-peak" to capture parents, but I don't think the capacity is there.
I would have agreed with all of that pre-Covid, but how much of it will be true in (say) twelve months time? Will the traffic return? A lot of people I have spoken to in the past few weeks have seen the advantages of working at home, Zoom meetings etc and don't want to go back to the old travel patterns. I think incentivisation to use rail will become a big issue - either that or we will see major, permanent, cuts to services - this government won't think twice about doing that if they think it will be popular, and railways are an easy target for the propaganda machine.
Or putting on longer aircraft just as you advocate for trains. They also have spare capacity much of the time and the lower density is a strong attraction vs nose to nose standing trains.Not really, trains can be made longer (theoretically), have spare capacity the majority of the time, and have a higher max passenger density. Airlines respond to increased passenger demand by putting on more flights.
I'm currenly looking at tickets for my daughter and two children to travel from Teesside to West Yorkshire. Even with Advance fares, the cheapest I can get for a return journey is £30 more than the cost of driving them both ways. Who wants trains with that cost differential?
That kind of incentive is the luxury of the relatively affluent. For most people it's a similar equation to which supermarket to use. Rail, offer the best deal and we'll use you. If not, we won't. Simple as that.The immediate financial cost isn't the real cost to society of choices like that. Some of us take broader issues into account when deciding on transport mode, not just what it costs us personally in £ at that time. My conscience being clearer is part of the incentive for me when travelling by rail.
That journey sounds like my idea of absolute hell.Four of us drove from London to Sheffield and back earlier this year in a small petrol car. I used an emissions calculator which showed that this was better than the train emissions wise - possibly because it's a diesel route on the MML. For London to Manchester I would expect the train to win.