A new Sydney-Canberra high-speed railway

High-speed rail for Australia, at a fraction of the cost and build time

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$4.25 billion construction cost, 91 minutes Sydney Central to Canberra Civic


A high-speed railway between Sydney and Canberra is the kind of infrastructure project that should have been built in this country twenty years ago. Sydney is a major metropolis with a sprawling suburban fringe, Canberra is a compact mid-sized city with a mostly white-collar workforce less than 300km away. In between there are two major regional centres (the Southern Highlands and Goulburn) as well as a number of smaller townships with good potential as either tourist or commuter towns. The terrain, while often undulating and even hilly in places, is not overly difficult; the urban sprawl of Sydney is not yet so dense as to make a high-speed rail corridor an impossibility.

Yet despite the promise, no previous proposal has been successful. Why?

Previous high-speed rail proposals have been all about the capitals – outrageously quick travel times between CBDs, but few stops if any in between. The goal was to compete (just barely) with air travel, not improve access to the regions. This had the dual effect of increasing construction costs well beyond the point of unviability, and also having little positive effect on the vast spaces between the major cities.

Hot Rails takes the opposite approach: the focus is on increasing the accessibility and convenience of regional living, rather than on inter-capital travel (which is already well served by air travel). As such, the design philosophy has a strong emphasis on maximising the number of regional stations served, and locating regional stations close to town centres (ideally at existing railway stations), while keeping the option open to upgrade to faster speeds with future investment.

What follows is a radically different high-speed rail proposal for Australia – one in which the focus is on incrementally bringing the existing railway into the 21st century, and sharing the benefits among all regions of Australia. By serving more people, more towns, and ultimately delivering more benefits for a fraction of the cost, this is the way Australia can finally join the high-speed rail club.

Alignment design and overview

Sydney and Canberra’s city centres are about 247km away as the crow flies, with varied terrain in between. Though much of it is flat to undulating, the Nepean Valley, Illawarra Escarpment and Molonglo River gorge present significant geographic barriers. Most of the plausible routes through this terrain have already been utilised by existing highway and rail transport corridors. As such, the 295km route identified in the Hot Rails study follows the existing railway for most of its length, except in the Upper Nepean region between Mittagong and Campbelltown, where it broadly follows the Hume Highway. In metropolitan Sydney, from Glenfield it uses existing rail corridors as far in as Strathfield, then finishes the final 10km to Central in a newly constructed tunnel.

The minimum design radius was set at 1000m, which allows tilting trains of the same type used in Germany and the UK to travel at 200km/h. This decision was taken to aggressively minimise capital costs while still achieving a revolutionary speed increase compared to other transport options in Australia. Nevertheless, where terrain allows, the design radius was relaxed to 1800m (allowing 250km/h) or ideally 3000m (allowing 300km/h with non-tilting, TGV-style trains) to allow for future speed increases. The proposed railway is not electrified, and would use diesel- or turbine-electric trainsets.

Proposed alignment for Canberra to Sydney high-speed rail - click to enlarge

Proposed alignment for Canberra to Sydney high-speed rail – click to enlarge.

CanberraSydneySection

Elevation profile with key locations

Numbers at a glance

[table]
,Hot Rails,AECOM,Existing railway
Total length,294.9 km,280.1 km,329.5 km
Minimum radius,1000 m,7000 m,400 m
Maximum speed,200 km/h,350 km/h,160 km/h
Average speed,194.1 km/h,261.8 km/h,80.4 km/h
Stations served,17,3,11
Travel time (h:min),1:31,1:04,4:06
Minutes saved,155,182,N/A
Construction Cost ($billion),4.80,23.0,N/A
Cost per kilometre ($million),14.4,82.1,N/A
Cost per minute saved ($million),31.0,126.4,N/A
Cost per station served ($million),282.4,7666,N/A
[/table]

Note: AECOM refers to the 2013 High-Speed Rail report for the Australian government by the multidisciplinary engineering firm AECOM.

Detailed alignment design and costing

MossValePlan

Example of alignment design between Bundanoon and Moss Vale. Existing railway is black, proposed at-grade alignment is solid colour, alternative alignments are dashed. At-grade is yellow, bridges are blue, tunnels are red.

The following table lists the length and cost of the 21 individual railway sectors analysed for this plan. Click each link to see a detailed design and costing of the alignment in that sector. The subsequent graphs show the cost per kilometre of each sector according to type of expenditure, and the cumulative cost of the railway by sector (note that the construction cost does not include rollingstock):

[table]
Sector,Location,Length (km),Cost ($m),Cost/km ($m)
1,Canberra Civic,14.9,346.6,23.3
2,Molonglo Gorge,6.1,124.8,20.4
3,Kowen Forest,6.4,107.9,17.0
4,Brooks Hill,10.8,86.4,8.0
5,Butmaroo,15.5,80.6,5.2
6,Tarago,13.3,98.0,7.3
7,Lake Bathurst,7.9,59.0,7.5
8,Mulwaree Valley,22.3,70.2,3.1
9,Goulburn South,7.3,79.9,10.9
10,Goulburn East,8.34,60.6,7.3
11,Towrang,20.0,167.9,8.5
12,Marulan,14.79,145.0,9.8
13,Bundanoon,13.7,152.1,11.1
14,Moss Vale,14.3,212.4,14.8
15,Bowral / Mittagong,14.3,135.6,9.5
16,Yerrinbool,19.0,173.3,9.1
17,Upper Nepean,20.2,199.5,9.9
18,Campbelltown,17.5,206.6,11.8
19,Glenfield,12.8,230.0,18.0
20,Liverpool,12.3,373.0,30.3
21,Sydney Central,23.5,1148.3,48.9
,TOTAL,294.9,4250.6,14.41
[/table]

Average costs per kilometre

Average construction costs per kilometre

Cumulative cost by sector

Cumulative construction cost by sector

Cost breakdown

[table]
Component,Cost ($m),Percentage
Tunnels,1157.9,24.1%
Bridges,583.2,12.1%
Earthworks,278.5,5.8%
Track,767.4,16.0%
Signalling,360.4,7.5%
Civil works,551.3,11.5%
Stations,423.5,8.8%
Land,128.5,2.7%
Rollingstock,552.0,11.5%
TOTAL,4802.6,100.0%
[/table]

Cost breakdown by type of expenditure

Cost breakdown by type of expenditure

Future upgrading to 300km/h

Allowable speeds on the proposed railway

Allowable speeds on the proposed railway

While minimising construction cost is important, Hot Rails has also kept in mind the possibility of future speed upgrades. Wherever possible, the track was designed with a faster allowable speed than the 200km/h specified for the proposed rollingstock. In fact, outside the metropolitan areas of Sydney and Canberra, there are only six instances in which the allowable speed is lower than 300km/h (seven if you include outer Sydney). It is possible in each case to eliminate these restrictions by building additional deviations, however they vary in both cost and difficulty:

[table]
Deviation location,Construction difficulty,Length,Estimated cost,Description
Bungendore,Medium,9km,$150 million,The town would have to be bypassed with an 8.8km deviation beginning at the Ellendon St underpass and rejoining the mainline near Butmaroo. The terrain is undulating but would probably not require tunnels or bridges.
Tarago,Low-Medium,4km,$50 million,The curve south of the town (near Mt Fairy) would need reshaping to ease radius from 1500m to 3000m. This would require about 4km of additional earthworks.
Lake Bathurst,High,8km,$200 million,The township would need to be bypassed with an 8km deviation beginning just north of Tarago and taking the alignment across the other side of the Mulwaree River and rejoining just north of the town. Much of this deviation would have to be on floodplain culverts.
Marulan,Low,1.5km,$35 million,The curve requires easing from the existing 2000m to 3000m. This could be easily achieved by extending the existing curve further into the adjoining paddocks although the Hume Highway onramps would have to be slightly reconfigured.
Goulburn,Medium-High,12km,$225 million,About half of the deviation could use the Hume Highway corridor which has an existing radius of 3000m. A 2km-long viaduct would be required toward the southern end of the deviation to cross the Mulwaree River flats.
Bowral/Mittagong,Very high,15km,$800 million +,Depending on the route taken the deviation would have to be between 14 and 17km in length and comprise at least 1km of floodplain culvert and 2.5km of tunnel (possibly as much as 6km).
Campbelltown,Low-Medium,2km,$50 million,The existing curve radii at Leumeah and Ingleburn are 1500m and 1800m respectively but they could be relatively easily increased to the requisite 3000m with only minor modifications to existing roads and private property. This would allow 300km/h transit to Liverpool.
[/table]

Stations and Scheduling

To get the most benefit out of high-speed rail, it is critical that a large number of stations be served. Hot Rails serves 15 regional stations between Sydney and Canberra compared to just one for the government study. This is another advantage of operating at 200km/h rather than 350km/h – it’s much easier to make frequent stops without destroying your average speed. High-speed rail won’t have much impact on an area if it doesn’t stop there. However, too many stops and the average speed drops significantly. For this reason several alternative stopping patterns should be offered.

Proposed schedules of a Sydney-Canberra high-speed rail service

Proposed stations and stopping patterns of a Sydney-Canberra high-speed rail service

The time penalty of stopping at too many stations can be severe. A train travelling at 200km/h will lose 3 minutes (and 10km) compared to an express service for every stop it makes (assuming 2 minutes lost to deceleration and acceleration, and 1 minute loiter at the station). This pushes the transit time of an all-stops service well over two hours. We will therefore propose two variants of a limited-stops service: “Capital Stops” is all stops from Canberra to Marulan, then express to Glenfield and Sydney, and “Highlands Stops” stops only at the major stations of the Southern Highlands. The stop at Glenfield allows greater convenience to travellers with final destinations in Western Sydney. The transit time of these services would look like this:

[table]
Station,Express,Capital,Highlands,All Stops
Canberra Civic,0.0,0.0,0.0,0.0
Bungendore,12.4,15.4,12.4,15.4
Tarago,21.1,27.1,21.1,27.1
Lake Bathurst,23.4,32.4,23.4,32.4
Goulburn,32.3,44.3,32.3,44.3
Marulan,40.7,55.7,40.7,55.7
Wingello,45.2,60.2,48.2,63.2
Penrose,46.8,61.8,49.8,67.8
Bundanoon,49.3,64.3,55.3,73.3
Moss Vale,53.6,68.6,62.6,80.6
Bowral,56.4,71.4,68.4,86.4
Mittagong,57.9,72.9,72.9,90.9
Yerrinbool,61.3,76.3,76.3,94.3
Bargo,63.6,78.6,78.6,99.6
Wilton,68.3,83.3,83.3,107.3
Campbelltown,74.9,89.9,89.9,116.9
Glenfield,78.7,96.7,96.7,123.7
Sydney Central,90.6,108.6,108.6,135.6
[/table]
(travel time to station in minutes, bold/coloured denotes that the service stops at the station)

A financial analysis of the fast railway, including detailed passenger projections and fare estimates, will be the topic of an upcoming post.

Conclusion

The word “transformative” gets thrown around a lot, and nowhere more so than in proposals for high-speed rail. I previously assumed that the whole “transformational” schtick was just marketing gobbledygook. However, it has an insidious effect on the practicality of a project. When your proposed project is a “transformational” 350km/h mega-engineering feat, the costs blow out way beyond that required for an incremental improvement of existing rail infrastructure. The blisteringly fast top speeds are great for headlines, but sadly ensure the financial unviability of the project.

The Hot Rails proposal is more modest, but would still be a revolutionary change to Australia’s transport mix. It is easily achievable with existing technology, yet also able to use most of the existing rail corridor with minor improvements to alignment and hardware. Not only that, but it would be able to begin services to the closest stations in just a couple of years from the start of construction, compared to many decades for the super-fast megaproject. And on top of that, the corridor would be capable of future upgrade to 300km/h if the demand for it justified the large expense in doing so.

Hot Rails shows that high-speed rail in Australia can be done without entirely new rail corridors, without prohibitively high costs, and without extremely long construction timelines. It is the first proposal in 20 years which could be financed by the private sector at no net cost to the taxpayer. And it is the only proposal to focus on regional Australia rather than the capitals. The Hot Rails plan for regional fast rail is the only realistic way to get Australian railways back on track.

 

7 Comments

  1. I love it! A common sense approach starting small but being upgradable when the time comes. Allows an ROI before going to the 350km/h phase.

    • Thanks for stopping by! As well as getting cash flow early, a short construction timeline (to the closest destinations) will build public support as people see the benefits immediately. Very important for large scale civil infrastructure projects that require long-term bipartisan support!

  2. David Glynne Jones

    This is a very realistic and exciting proposal – as fast as you need to go and no faster. The European experience has demonstrated that end-to-end transit times of 2 hours or less will cause travellers to switch from other modes to rail.
    The Express, Capital and Highlands timetables all meet this criteria,
    and would attract travellers from air, bus and car modes.
    The primary mode for business travel between Canberra and Sydney is private car (not air). It’s worth noting that the Murrays coach service (3.5 hours) already competes head-to-head with Qantas and Virgin for passenger numbers on the Sydney -Canberra route.

  3. David Glynne Jones

    Battery electric traction – an emerging option for fast passenger rail.
    Current lithium battery energy densities (100kwh-250kwh/tonne) are not light enough for battery-only operation of fast passenger trains, although the technology is now being deployed in hybrid trains.
    The next generation of lithium battery technology, based on lithium sulphur chemistry, is now coming into production after a decade of development, and is already achieving cell-level energy densities of 250kwh-400kwh/tonne. It is expected that 500kwh/tonne will be available by the early 2020s, and 1000kwh(1MWh)/tonne around the late 2020s/early 2030s.
    500kwh/tonne would be light enough for fast passenger train operation over the Sydney-Canberra route, and would provide all of the advantages of conventional ‘wired’ electrification, with better acceleration, energy regeneration on gradient descents and braking, and operation on 100% renewably sourced electricity produced in the region.
    For consideration …

  4. Warwick Cadenhead

    Hi Edwin
    I’ve recently discovered your site and I think it’s great.
    A couple of concerns about this article – I doubt a 200 km/h train could average 194.1 km/h on the journey. British Pendolinos (at same top speed) usually average about 141 between London and Manchester. If you assumed 150 km/h average for the Express option, that would work out at 118 minutes. I would also add 4 or even 5 minutes per additional stop – time at station usually winds up being 2 minutes.
    I would also suggest lobbying the Minister for Population about this concept. Could achieve ‘congestion busting’ and ‘decentralization’ goals.

    • Hi Warwick, thanks for your kind words.

      Regarding the high average speed, the primary design goal I worked with was to allow 200km/h running for tilting trains with no speed restricted sections. If such a criterion were adhered to, the only slow sections would be on approach to terminal stations. It is likely however that leaving some sections with a lower allowable speed would significantly reduce the overall cost of the upgrade, without a severe increase in travel time (sub-2hr would still be revolutionary, miles better than any other transport mode).

      As I understand it, the NSW govt is currently undertaking a study on the best way to upgrade the four main rail corridors out of Sydney to higher speeds. I’m hopeful this will lead to some practical proposals in the near future!

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