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Electric and hydrogen rail: Potential contribution to net zero in the UK

Kathryn G. Logan, John D. Nelson, Benjamin McLellan, Astley Hastings

2020Transportation Research Part D Transport and Environment64 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Electric trains (ET) and hydrogen trains (HT) are considered zero emission at the point of use. True emissions are dependent upon non-tailpipe sources, primarily in energy production. We present UK carbon dioxide (CO2) operating emission model outputs for conventionally fuelled trains (CFT), ETs and HTs between 2017 and 2050 under four National Grid electricity generation scenarios. Comparing four service categories (urban, regional, intercity and high speed) to private conventionally fuelled vehicles (CFV) and electric vehicles considering average distance travelled per trip under different passenger capacity levels (125%, 100%, 75%, 50% and 25%). Results indicate by 2050 at 100% capacity CFTs produce a fifth of the emissions of CFVs per kilometre per person. Under two degree generation scenario, by 2050 ETs produced 14 times and HTs produced five times less emissions than CFTs. Policymakers should encourage shifts away from private vehicles to public transport powered by low carbon electricity.

Topics & Concepts

TrainElectricityZero emissionEnvironmental scienceHydrogen vehicleElectricity generationCyclingElectric vehicleTransport engineeringHydrogenAutomotive engineeringEngineeringPhysicsElectrical engineeringHydrogen fuelGeographyPower (physics)CartographyArchaeologyQuantum mechanicsElectric Vehicles and InfrastructureMaritime Transport Emissions and EfficiencyVehicle emissions and performance
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