Italy : a private project to operate intermodal trains on high speed line
News of Mediarail.be - Signalling technician and railways observer
See also the Trainworld on facebook of Mediarail.be, also Twitter and LinkedIn
16/03/2016
After France, Germany, and more recently Britain , the private Italian firm ISC - Interporto
Servizi Cargo - would like to use the Italian high-speed lines at night for
intermodal trains. This company is installed on the site of Nola, not far from
Naples, not far from the depot of AGV of the trains operator NTV Italo. And
besides, the boss of ISC is precisely Giuseppe Sciarrone, the very man who
managed NTV Italo until recently! That's this fine connoisseur of the railway
business who put on the table this intermodal rail project on AV lines (Alta
Velocita).
The Interporto Servizi Cargo carrier has its own tracks -
well border marked by a concrete wall (photo) - on the site TIN, the Terminal
Intermodal Nola, which is actually a private concession granted by the
Campania. The ISC project includes the establishment of fast intermodal trains
to transport trailers only by "mega trailer" wagon, between the Nola
Interporto and northern Italy, where there are connections to and from Northern
Europe. The project supports the extension of the famous railway freight corridors
TEN-T launched by the European Commission. Four of these corridors lead to
Italy, hence the importance of the project.
The feasibility study has been launched and plans provide,
from 2018, to circulate the overnight trains on the Italian high speed lines in
commercial speed of 160 km / h. But he must first adapt the rail infrastructure
at the PC80 gauge. The AV network already has these features, but this is not
the case everywhere in the classic lines of the Italian railway network. The
PC80 template is required for the transport of road trailers 4 meters high at
the corners of angle, which is also one of the criteria of the TEN-T corridors.
Moreover, the idea is to operate these trains outside the passenger services,
so only at night.
The other aspect is the length - and therefore the load - of
trains. As shown in the table presented at the Convegno FerCargo of February in
Milan (first conference on freight), the project ISC also concerns the
extension lengths of freight trains in Italy, carrying the current 450-550
meters to 750 meters, thereby increasing the capacity from 1600 to 2000 tons,
in favor of rail freight companies to reduce costs through greater
competitiveness with road transport.
Finally, there is the rolling stock. For now, ISC has three
TRAXX F 140 DC Series E 484, with dual voltage 3 kV DC / 25 kV AC rented from
MRCE (photo). However, they must be equipped with ERTMS Level 2 to circulate on
the "AV" line of the Italian network. As for wagons, the company
wants to acquire a series with a speed of 160km / h maximum envisaged. However,
the TRAXX F 140 are not capable of this speed, as indicated by their model
number.
In the past
The Italian idea is not new. In Germany, some freight trains
are operated on the 'neubaustrecken' network, but it is true they have a long
profile designed from the outset for this mission, ie with more gentle profile.
In France, there was once in 1997 a closer idea of the Italian experience,
when the fast freight was operated on the LGV Sud-Est with the MVGV code (goods
to travelers plan Grande Vitesse). The traffic was operated during the night,in
order to avoid to interfere with the TGV traffic and the trains consisted of BB
22200 already equipped for operation on the LGV as well as freight wagons class
G02 with Y37A bogie. But about the load, the trains were limited to some 300
small tons, which could not be commercially competitive. The experiment ended
in 2010. In 2012, Europorte made a brief demonstration of feasibility with an
intermodal train between Antwerp and Barking via the HS1 in Britain. More
recently, DB Schenker Rail UK has launched in January 2014 a new regular
intermodal train for six months between the Spanish terminal of Silla, near
Valencia, and also Barking, near East London. Industrial John G. Russell also
plans to invest more than £ 500,000 in wagons with 90-foot modified, to meet
the requirements of a train of 1,600 tons on HS1. The company would work with
the AAE renter for the provision of ad hoc wagons. Originality of these projects:
traffic borrows British LGV HS1 which has the European P400 gauge from the
beginning, instead of restrictive gauge in force throughout the UK. But the
traffic window available is only of six hours, again at night.
It will be interesting to follow the Italian project to see
to what extent freight can benefit from infrastructure originally designed for
high-speed passenger