Away from the “blah, blah, blah” of the main COP26 events in
Glasgow, the Low Carbon Logistics conference at Mossend (held on the 8th,
9th and 10th of November) showcased some of the solutions
the transport industry is coming up with to reduce its carbon footprint.
Exhibitors in attendance included Network Rail, DB Cargo UK,
Nuclear Transport Solutions (owner of DRS), Peel Ports, and of course the hosts
for the event, P&D Stirling, whose Mossend International Railfreight Park
(MIRP) provided the venue for the conference. MIRP is a controversial
development locally, with objections raised over building on “green belt” land,
but the construction of MIRP will allow more freight on rail and fewer trucks
using local roads through Bellshill.
The three day conference had a different theme each day,
with speakers discussing the relevant topics. Monday’s theme was “let’s talk
about rail freight”. Speakers included Morwen Mands, Head of Sustainability at
Highland Spring Group, who are building a railfreight siding adjacent to the
group’s main bottling plant in Blackford, and Chris Swan, Head of Rail at
Tarmac, who own the rail-served cement terminal at Uddingston. Tuesday’s theme was “Driving rail Innovations”
with an emphasis on decarbonising rail. I attended on Wednesday, which had the
theme of "skills and opportunity" with speakers from the National
Skills Academy for Rail, Glasgow Caledonian University and SWGR talking about
how the amount of electrification going on (plus maintenance, plus building HS2
and reopenings) requires a lot of manpower and skills and how best to retain
these skills as older engineers retire and (post Brexit) European workers move
back to Europe. The main message here was the need to train up a new generation
of engineers, particularly civil and electrical engineers, and technicians.
Before all the speeches started, there was a chance to speak
to the exhibitors, which resulted in several interesting conversations. One exhibitor
from Network Rail mentioned somebody at the Q&A the day before (possibly
one of our members) asking about electrifying a certain line in Glasgow and the
answer was that it would simply cost too much. The main concerns were over
alterations to listed buildings and closing the line for 18 months. In a
so-called "climate emergency" how much are we as a country willing to
spend cutting CO2 emissions? It was reported recently that Freightliner were
taking their electric locos off the rails and replacing them with diesels
because the price of electricity had shot up. This was due to the rising price
of gas, upon which (apparently) much of our generating capacity is still
dependant. Clearly decarbonising the grid must go hand-in-hand with
electrifying transport otherwise putting up wires is simply moving the
emissions around. The same of course goes for battery and hydrogen power. Yes,
the vehicles themselves don't pollute, but the production of hydrogen is very
energy intensive, and batteries contain rare earth elements that come from iffy
mines in the Congo. I had another interesting conversation with a man from Peel
Ports about the developments at Hunterston, as well as getting the railway to
Greenock Ocean Terminal reopened, and the Mossend-Liverpool container train.
Obviously Peel Ports are keen on using rail and they need to be encouraged in
this endeavour.
Each day culminated in a locomotive naming ceremony, with
GBRF naming 92020 “Billy Stirling” on Monday, DB Cargo naming 90039 “The
Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport” on Tuesday and DRS naming 68006
“Pride of the North” on Wednesday.
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