The “green movement” has made great strides in transportation: electric cars and buses are already running in Connecticut, helping reduce pollution. And soon electric locomotives will be added to the mix.
The old diesel locomotives we
used for decades were really dirty, spewing carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas),
nitrogen oxides (contributing to acid rain), sulfur dioxide (more acid rain)
and soot (think: asthma).The old FL9 loco at Danbury Railway Museum
Those FL9 diesels came into
service in the 1950s and ran on third-rail electric power into Grand Central,
but are now history. (You can still see a couple at the Danbury Railway Museum.) The old locos were so unreliable that they’d
be left running (and spewing) all night at the Danbury station just to be sure
they’d start in the morning.
But now the MTA is ordering 13 battery-electric locomotives from Siemens Mobility North America. They will run “under the wire” on the all-electric main line but rely on batteries along the unelectrified Danbury and Waterbury branches and for entering NYC. They will also be essential for Metro-North’s plans to extend service to Penn Station where (like at Grand Central) diesel trains are not allowed.
Years ago, Danbury trains from
GCT pulled by the old FL9s were often unable to use their third-rail “shoes” to
leave the station under electric power.
Just before departure they’d unplug from “shore power” at GCT, shut off
their HVAC system and fire up their diesel engines for the ten-minute trip
through the Park Avenue tunnel.
The resulting pollution was
intense, which is why they turned off the air circulation onboard until reaching
125th Street. The practice, though
not frequent (I experienced it myself!) was technically illegal, but the
railroad did it anyway. Now this won’t
be an issue anymore.
The new battery equipped locomotives
will cost about $24 million each and should start arriving in 2029.
In the rest of the world it’s
often cheaper to go with batteries than to electrify the rail lines. In Europe and
Japan all-electric, battery powered trains are often used on commuter runs of
up to 75 miles, recharging at stations in as little as 20 minutes. Though the batteries are heavy, they can last
10-15 years before needing replacements (up to $1 million per engine). Like
electric cars, there are fewer moving parts so maintenance is much easier.
Best of all, they’re quieter, cleaner
and accelerate a lot faster. And
operating costs are cheaper given the cost of diesel fuel. While diesel trains’ fuel cost $1.50 - $2.50
per mile to operate, battery powered trains cost only ten to thirty cents a
mile.
And like our current M8
electric trains, the new locos will use regenerative braking, using their
brakes as mini-generators to give the batteries a boost when slowing down.
Of course, all of this “greening”
of Metro-North may wither on the vine if the MTA’s congestion pricing toll plan
gets killed by the White House. So, as we say, “stay tuned for further
developments”.
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