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BNSF Eyes Route To Electric Trains

The Journal of Commerce Online - News Story
Railroad could carry power lines in rail corridors, run locomotives off electricity
"It's really going to have to be a federal vision, with some federal funding."

Converting the freight rail system to electric trains from today’s all-diesel operations might seem like a far-off notion, but BNSF Railway's Matthew K. Rose is starting to explore this new frontier.

If his ideas pan out, BNSF’s still-early planning efforts could help produce historic change for North American freight railroads.

Rose, BNSF’s chairman, president and CEO, told The Journal of Commerce his company is in talks with electrical power line builders about stringing or burying transmission lines in some of BNSF’s inter-city rail corridors.

With those line-easement leases emerging as a possible new revenue source, BNSF officials are also weighing how to electrify the carrier’s mainline track system and asking equipment makers about locomotives that could run both under electric or diesel power.

That puts the nation’s second-largest railroad in the midst of a power-line building boom to upgrade the electrical grid, and angling to be ready for the time when proposed federal caps on carbon emissions might turn diesel use into a big financial disadvantage.

“We have had conversations with two, if not three, outside organizations,” Rose said, “around using railroad right of way for different opportunities of electrification.” He does not see such potential power line projects developing quickly on the railroad, but said BNSF is in “serious” talks with two of them.

He said BNSF could opt to draw electricity from those lines for its own use, in lieu of cash payments. With that, it might also offer power along with freight transportation to a new-era industrial park for various types of factories that burn lots of energy.

BNSF has not asked locomotive makers to prepare any plans, Rose said, but has discussed with them what kind of equipment is already available or could be developed if the railroad begins to integrate electric power with its vast diesel territory.

He said the price tag to electrify all BNSF mainline tracks could be $10 billion, including what the carrier would need in dual-mode locomotives. That’s too steep a price for BNSF to justify right now, but the initial power line projects could be a way to start.

“Without a doubt it helps a lot, but it’s not like either of these deals that we’ve looked at on transmission lines are to blanket our 26,000 miles of railroad,” Rose said.

Co-locating power lines along rail makes a great deal of sense, and is THE near term, revenue-generating step that the freight rail industry should take today to prepare for electrification tomorrow. Electric trains, with thier imbalance, harmonics, and varying and bi-directional power demands, are complicated loads to connect to electrical grids. The TGV in France, which represents a fraction of the load of a typical US freight train, typically connects its 25,000 Volt catenary into 230,000 volt transmission lines, every 25 to 50 miles. In other words, having access to the large, high voltage power lines (that are very expensive to build), is a big chunk of the job in electrifying the US rail infrastructure. Steps taken to bring these lines into the proximity of railroads today will pay hundres of times over tomorrow.

- By grc on 1/25/10

I have been following the discussions about utilizing electricity to run our trains and think that the idea of running the power lines along our track makes a lot of sense. I would also like to see the windmills used wherever possible along these route with feeders into these power lines and possible utilized by the railroad for its power for the engines on some routes that don't have the power lines to them. looking at the two major east west railroad routes it looks like they have miles of track and rightaways which would be adequate for wind mills.
I'm sure this has been discussed at some level and I haven't seen the pro's and con's but would be interested to see them.

- By R Fox on 4/21/09

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