|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Network Rail has an obligation, transferred from the abolished Strategic Rail Authority, to produce Route Utilisation Strategies1 (RUS). As of late November 2008, 10 had been published, 1 was in draft under consultation, and a further 8 were at an earlier stage.
Approach and outputsAll but two RUSs are geographical, mainly regional, in nature. The exceptions are the Freight RUS and the Network RUS, which have the perspective of the network as whole. The non-regional geographical studies include the East Coast Main Line RUS and West Coast Main Line RUS, which penetrate Scotland and regions which have their own RUS. All RUSs consider the demands of freight transport, but the Freight RUS looks at the implications of major freight flows for Great Britain as a whole. The Network RUS is divided into four largely self-contained workstreams: long-distance traffic and generic cross-RUS issues; stations; rolling stock and depots; electrification. The first stage of each strategy is the preparation and publishing of a scoping document, which is usually produced after a few months. The main part of the study takes place over a period of a year or two, and this concludes with the production and distribution of a draft strategy document. About 12 weeks are allowed for consultation and responses from rail industry and other entities, following which the final strategy is developed and a final version is published. This is later established by the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR). The scoping document is usually fairly short, sometimes in the form of a presentation. The strategy document itself normally consists of a fairly standard number of sections: an introduction and explanation of context; a fairly detailed presentation of current services; a forecast of future changes (overwhelmingly increases) in demand; gaps in resources; options for satisfying the demand; the recommended strategy. Other sections may be included, including a section on the consultation process itself specifically in the draft strategy. The strategies developed so far are related to the Network Rail Control Periods (CPs). Short-term strategy includes those initiatives to the end of CP3, the current period; as this finishes on 31 March 2009, the activities mentioned in strategies presently approaching finalisation are mostly underway, at least in the planning process. In general strategies have an approximate 10 year timescale, taking them into a "long term" corresponding with CP5 (ending in 2019); presumably future strategies will present specific initiatives towards the end of that period, and maybe into the next, and CP4 (ending in 2014) will become the new short term perspective. Network Rail has an obligation to maintain RUSs, even after establishment. This would be the case in one or more of the following situations: when there has been a change in circumstances; if ordered to by the ORR; when (for whatever reason) it is clear the recommendations are probably no longer valid. The RUS is revisited using the same methodology. Individual strategiesPublishedThese are listed in order of publication; they are all established unless otherwise annotated:
Scheduled for publication by end-2009
The remainder are listed alphabetically:
References
|
| All Right Reserved © 2007, Designed by Stylish Blog. |