Welcome to the 'New Somerset and Dorset Railway'
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Saturday, April 28, 2007
environmental responsibilities
We've always taken our responsibilities towards the environment seriously at the S&D. From protection of the animals and plants that share our site through to caring for the woodland alongside the station in cooperation with Wildspace, and trying to recycle and use kinder methods of controlling weeds and pests. Soon we'll be growing some of our own catering coach food in the greenhouse (organically of course!) and we've always used free range eggs in the food we sell.
Ten years ago few of course took much of this into account, but the environment - particularly climate change and peak oil - are rapidly taking over as our principle causes for concern over and above the old issues such as unemployment, education and defence. As we run out of oil and the world continues to heat up will the big guns of big brother turn towards the wider railway heritage movement? As we turn from oil to coal for our fossil fuels will heritage railways even be allowed to buy coal? How will we run our diesels and steam engines?
Diesel has no future, very soon the costs of fuelling a diesel loco will make them uneconomic on all lines. Steam will struggle on but soon everyone will be after coal and the price will skyrocket. There is an option of course, and I've touched on it before. Steam engines being simple and sturdy constructions can run on anything that will burn, and the obvious solution is to burn wood. It's renewable (if not over-exploited), can be grown on our doorstep and if planned well costs very little. Growing new trees to replace those burned for fuel keeps the carbon-cycle pretty much neutral.
But another aspect is that we need our passengers to come to us - today many use cars but few if any will have this option in the medium-term. Only lines with a connection to a much expanded rail network will be able to survive and flourish. But they will also need to serve a real transport need - and this should be part of any line's strategy. Most of today's heritage lines would serve a real transport need, whether for freight, passengers or both. Whether a real 'heritage' aspect will survive in this new world remains to be seen, but then today's heritage lines are very different from the enthusiast-targeted 'preserved' lines of the 1950s and 60s. We shouldn't be frightened of change, in fact we should embrace it. Careful planning is the secret, and we engage in plenty of that at the S&D!
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2 comments:
If you want to encourage passenger traffic, don't forget cyclists in your planning.
I used to live in Bedford and work in Milton Keynes. I often cycled rather than use my car, using the Bedford-Bletchley line that had a good old-fashioned guards waggon that I could put my bike in. The guard was always very pleasant and we often had a good laugh.
This is in contrast to the rail trip we took to Thurso en-route to a cycling tour in Orkney and Shetland. The first leg was fine in a high-speed train which had a guards waggon (or whatever they call them on an HST) though we did have to book the bikes on. But on a later leg, a small electric service IIRC, we had to unload our bikes of all the panniers to get them to fit. It was a right pain in the butt, not helped by the guard who was really abrupt and really didn't want us there.
We're very cycle friendly on the S&D with our support in particular for the Radstock-Midsomer Norton combined cycleway/railway, and would welcome all the opportunities that cycle-rail synergy offer, including trips one way by cycle and back by train etc. Rail and cycling are quickly becoming the big boys of transport as Peak Oil approaches - both are sustainable, leave a very small footprint on the environment and aren't dependent on imported fossil fuels!
There will always be room for cycles on S&D trains!
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