º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinion

Will the Global Centre for Rail Excellence be delivered

My fifty years transport economist experience says it faces a big challenge in raising funding and this column wishes it well.

How the GCRE could look.

New trains and their component parts in the supply chain have to be tested during their construction to ensure safe design and their operation integrates one component part with another.

Last week Simon Jones, chief executive of Welsh Government sponsored Global Centre for Rail Excellence (GCRE), showed me around its location on an open cast mining site on the edge of Bannau Brecheiniog. It gave this column the opportunity to understand how it sees its future, how much progress has been made and the market competition and funding challenges it faces.

It is intended to be a purpose-built facility for railway research, testing and certification of rolling stock, infrastructure and innovative new rail and mobility technologies.

It is a futuristic vision to put Wales ahead in railway technology development where continuous technological change is evidenced by comparing the previous diesel-powered IC-125 with the current GWR Hitachi electric-diesel trains operating between south Wales and London.

The centre has received some negative comments, but is this the Welsh lobster syndrome where any lobster trying to escape the pot gets pulled back?

Earlier discussions with possible investors were not successful . Here this column sets out the investment appraisal criteria investors would use in considering market potential and the expected revenue flows.

GCRE has the characteristics for success. An essential connection to the live railway is provided by the Onllwyn coal washery line maintained by Network Rail. The site is sufficiently large to accommodate a 25kv overhead powered twin-track railway circuit with curvature able to operate trains at up to 110 mph and track to standard and metre gauges. Specialist off mainline sites are preferred for such operations.

The GCRE is entering a competitive market where there are already well establish and new test track facilities. There are established facilities for customers in mainland Europe at Velim in the Czech Republic and Siemens’ Wegberg-Wildenrath facility in Germany.