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Published: 16 October 2006 11:00 AM
Industry Channel: Rail & Marine
Source: The Engineer
A rail traffic management system tested in Sweden could cut a train's energy
consumption by up to half while boosting its operational efficiency, its
developers claimed.
The system, called CATO (Computer Aided Train Operation), combines a
custom-designed driver interface and software with GSM-R digital radio
technology to continuously calculate and display the optimum running speed of a
train.
Information from the line is transmitted to a Traffic Control Centre (TCC),
processed using the algorithms developed for the system and returned to the
driver interface as a speed value.
This allows the locomotive to proceed at the ideal rate relative to the traffic
situation ahead of it, eliminating the 'stop-start' progress along tracks that
wastes both time and energy.
According to rail technology specialist Transrail, which developed CATO in a
project funded by Sweden's railway authority, trials on freight trains running
on industrial tracks in the north of the country yielded highly promising
results.
Transrail's chief executive Per Leander told the Intelligent Transport Systems
World Congress in London that on the test lines 'we could easily reduce energy
consumption by as much as 40-50 per cent even if we try to operate the trains at
higher average speeds'.
Leander said the key to CATO's seven-year development is advances in
communications technology, which allow a train's onboard system to be in
continuous dialogue with a TCC.
Most driver-assistance systems are self-contained, he said, but communication
with a TCC allows the real situation on a line to be assessed, rather than just
the ideal rate of progress demanded for the timetable.
This allows drivers to run their trains according to the 'slots' available to
them on a line, even when the service is not running as expected.
'Knowing the situation in front of the train, the system can give information to
the driver that it should run into its slot at the right time and at the right
speed,' said Leander.
The system also unlocks the potential for highly efficient automatic train
operation, where the driver allows the train to run itself in accordance with
the optimal speed profile.
The levels of energy saving seen on the freight trains were achieved in
conjunction with the highly power-efficient regenerative braking systems used on
that line, said Leander.
Regenerative systems feed the excess energy usually lost during braking back
into the locomotive as power. Leander said that as these are increasingly
adopted as standard on new rolling stock, their potential can be maximised by
using them with systems such as CATO.
However, Transrail claimed that energy and environmental benefits are matched by
increased operational efficiency.
'During tests with the freight trains, on journeys of between 50km and 100km we
could make a driver arrive to within a few seconds of where he should be,' said
Leander. He said this could translate into a five to 10 per cent increase of
capacity on a line without needing to upgrade the infrastructure of the track.
CATO is designed to operate as an adjunct to major European train safety systems
such as ERTMS. Leander said Transrail hopes to develop CATO as a standard,
allowing manufacturers to develop various components for use on the train or in
the control centre.
Swedish railways are to adopt technology that could make it cost-effective to
keep open previously loss-making regional lines, ITS was told.
The system, called Regional ERTMS, gives trains on low-traffic local lines
equipment that can provide basic train control, removing the need for upgrades
to track infrastructure that could render the routes uneconomical. Sweden will
install Regional ERTMS on 13 lines by 2010.
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