As some of you know, I love railroads and trains and it seems some others here do also, hence why I've started this topic.
The United States was the first country to use railroads, starting with the Transcontinental Railroad (now owned by Union Pacific). We were also the first to improve railroad efficiency and safety as well. After the railroad industry in the USA grew, it spread across the world. And as of the past decade, the rail industry in the USA has just headed for rock bottom. A UP line about 5 miles from my house which once was active every time I went over it, is now growing grass over the ties and rails. The TRE running from Fort Worth to Dallas is a waste of money, considering how rarely it's used. Not to mention how ill maintained some railroads here are, some even still using the olde time wig wag crossings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UyMAV0BzHo
Despite the economic downturn in the USA, such inactivity on the rails is unacceptable. Meanwhile, we have tons of truckers on our highways carrying a smidge of what a freight train could haul at half the speed a train could haul it. Also, residents are commuting using the car when we (americans) could be using the train. Much faster, and cheaper in many parts of the US due to the price of gas. Look at europe... it's commuter train networks are thriving and there are not near as many cars on the highways as there are in the US.
That simply goes to show that the USA should make an attempt to use railroads more then roads for commuting and hauling freight alike, especially in the very few states that are actually thriving in the poor economical state that the USA is in, such as Colorado and North Dakota. It would be a very good investment, on the railroad companies part and city alike.
Besides this, if our current railroads would change to electric powered trains, it would save money and reduce the amount of fossil fuels being used. It would also fufill the statements that big companies like CSX and UP are making, to reduce the impact on the environment.
So in all, switching some of our commuter and freight transport efforts, in addition to using cleaner methods such as electricity, or even natural gas would:
-Make transportation more eco-friendly (clean electricity vs coal and other fossil fuels)
-Get up to 100 times more freight (100 wagons on a train vs 1 trailer on a truck) almost twice as fast (110kph on the highways vs excess of 200kph on the rails)
-Reduce the cost of travel to commuters (average 3.50 USD for a gallon of gas for a car that gets 30MPG) vs paying the same or even less for a 30 mile commute in fares for trains. Also considering how passenger trains travel faster than a car on the highway in many cases
-Reduce the amount of trucks and cars on the highway, making highways safer and reducing the amount of fossil fuels used.
Considering how America is VERY different from Europe in many ways, and TBH, in most fields, Europe is simply better, I think it'd be a good investment.
So, what are your thoughts on the matter?
The United States was the first country to use railroads, starting with the Transcontinental Railroad (now owned by Union Pacific). We were also the first to improve railroad efficiency and safety as well. After the railroad industry in the USA grew, it spread across the world. And as of the past decade, the rail industry in the USA has just headed for rock bottom. A UP line about 5 miles from my house which once was active every time I went over it, is now growing grass over the ties and rails. The TRE running from Fort Worth to Dallas is a waste of money, considering how rarely it's used. Not to mention how ill maintained some railroads here are, some even still using the olde time wig wag crossings https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2UyMAV0BzHo
Despite the economic downturn in the USA, such inactivity on the rails is unacceptable. Meanwhile, we have tons of truckers on our highways carrying a smidge of what a freight train could haul at half the speed a train could haul it. Also, residents are commuting using the car when we (americans) could be using the train. Much faster, and cheaper in many parts of the US due to the price of gas. Look at europe... it's commuter train networks are thriving and there are not near as many cars on the highways as there are in the US.
That simply goes to show that the USA should make an attempt to use railroads more then roads for commuting and hauling freight alike, especially in the very few states that are actually thriving in the poor economical state that the USA is in, such as Colorado and North Dakota. It would be a very good investment, on the railroad companies part and city alike.
Besides this, if our current railroads would change to electric powered trains, it would save money and reduce the amount of fossil fuels being used. It would also fufill the statements that big companies like CSX and UP are making, to reduce the impact on the environment.
So in all, switching some of our commuter and freight transport efforts, in addition to using cleaner methods such as electricity, or even natural gas would:
-Make transportation more eco-friendly (clean electricity vs coal and other fossil fuels)
-Get up to 100 times more freight (100 wagons on a train vs 1 trailer on a truck) almost twice as fast (110kph on the highways vs excess of 200kph on the rails)
-Reduce the cost of travel to commuters (average 3.50 USD for a gallon of gas for a car that gets 30MPG) vs paying the same or even less for a 30 mile commute in fares for trains. Also considering how passenger trains travel faster than a car on the highway in many cases
-Reduce the amount of trucks and cars on the highway, making highways safer and reducing the amount of fossil fuels used.
Considering how America is VERY different from Europe in many ways, and TBH, in most fields, Europe is simply better, I think it'd be a good investment.
So, what are your thoughts on the matter?