Search for any green Service

Find green products from around the world in one place

Businesses aim to get green travel policies on track

Businesses aim to get green travel policies on track

New survey reveals four out of five SMEs intend to take steps to encourage employees to embrace lower carbon travel options.

Over 80 per cent of UK small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) intend to increase their support for lower carbon business travel through corporate travel policies and budgets for 2024.

That is the headline finding from a new survey of over 500 decision makers at businesses with fewer than 250 employees commissioned by Trainline Partner Solutions, the B2B arm of Trainline.

The survey found nine in 10 UK SMEs expect to boost travel expenditure this year, while 92 per cent expect to see levels of business travel increase.

However, at the same time 83 per cent intend to strengthen their travel policy and/or financial support to make it easier for employees to opt for lower carbon travel modes in 2024. Specifically, 48 per cent are planning to use rail more to help reduce their emissions from business travel.

The survey also found 52 per cent of respondents have already set targets for reducing their emissions from business travel – and of those SMEs that have no such goals, two-thirds think it is likely their company will set a target this year.

“Businesses are telling us they expect to both travel and spend more this year as business travel continues to rebound post-Covid,” said Andrew Cruttenden, general manager at Trainline Partner Solutions. “We’re seeing a clear signal that sustainability considerations are a growing factor in setting travel policies and budgets, and rail is a great way to reduce the carbon emissions for travel versus flying and driving. Carriers and travel partners must ensure they can meet this growing demand by innovating and investing in the right tech that helps make rail a simple and seamless option for business travellers.”

Most businesses have slashed travel-related emissions in recent years, after the covid pandemic triggered widespread use of video conferencing platforms. However, business travels are expected to continue to recover this year, prompting calls for businesses and policymakers to incentivise wider use of lower emission forms of travel.

For example, the Climate Perks campaign has called on companies to offer employees extra days off if they use rail for their holidays, while green groups have repeatedly called for businesses to eschew the use of short haul flights wherever rail offers a viable alternative.

However, efforts to encourage wider use of rail have been hampered by the relatively high cost of rail compared to flights, with a Greenpeace analysis last month pointing to how popular rail routes across Europe over the festive period were on average 3.4 times more expensive than equivalent flights.

As such, campaigners are continuing to call on governments to introduce new policies and taxes to curb the availability of short haul flights and tackle the price differential between rail journeys and flights.

 

 


 

 

Source  –   BusinessGreen

Hydrogen-powered train makes UK maiden journey

Hydrogen-powered train makes UK maiden journey

A hydrogen-powered train has travelled on Britain’s rail network for the first time.

The prototype, called the Hydroflex, made a 25-mile round trip through Warwickshire and Worcestershire, reaching speeds of up to 50 mph.

Its next phase is to move the hydrogen tanks, fuel cell and battery out of a carriage and stash them underneath the train.

The aim is for the train to start carrying paying passengers by the end of 2021.

The perks of using hydrogen as an alternative fuel are not unknown. In 2008, the European Commission had already identified hydrogen as one of the new technologies that could help achieve a 60% to 80% reduction of greenhouse gases by 2050.

Today, the UK Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has announced the beginning of trials for HydroFLEX, the country’s first hydrogen-powered train.

Considered a huge step towards helping the UK achieve its 2050 net-zero emission goals, the train represents a key milestone for the rail industry and its commitment to sustainability. Here is what you need to know about the project.

 

What is HydroFLEX?

HydroFLEX is the UK’s first hydrogen-powered train. The project  – a partnership between the University of Birmingham and rolling stock company Porterbrook – took two years to develop as well as £1m in investment.

HydroFLEX has also received support from the UK Government, whose Department for Transport (DfT) contributed  £750,000 ). Out of £750,000, some £350,000 come from the DfT’s First of a Kind competition while another £400,000 was jointly provided by the DfT and Innovate UK.

 

 

How does it work?

HydroFLEX will not emit greenhouse gases, using instead hydrogen and oxygen to produce electricity, water and heat. The technology is expected to become available by 2023 when trains currently in use will be retrofitted with it.

The University of Birmingham is already working on the project’s next phase, which involves a hydrogen and battery-powered module that could be fitted underneath trains, allowing for more space in carriages.

“As we continue on our road to a green recovery, we know that to really harness the power of transport to improve our country – and to set a global gold standard – we must truly embed change,” said Shapps. “That’s why I’m delighted that through our plans to build back better we are embracing the power of hydrogen and the more sustainable, greener forms of transport it will bring.”

“The HydroFLEX project is a great example of how world-class research and development, together with the right industry partnerships, can deliver decarbonisation technologies that are both innovative and practical,” said University of Birmingham head of the college engineering and physical sciences Professor Stephen Jarvis.

“Successful mainline testing is a major milestone for HydroFLEX and is a clear demonstration of the important role hydrogen has to play in the UK’s rail industry.”

 

What was the industry reaction?

The industry’s overall response was positive. Porterbrook CEO Mary Grant reiterated the company’s commitment to delivering “a carbon-neutral and sustainable railway”.

“Today’s mainline testing of HydroFLEX achieves another important milestone on this journey,” she added. “I’m also delighted to be able to announce our intention to start producing HydroFLEX trains, creating the world’s first electric and hydrogen-powered bi-mode rolling stock, as well as generating significant opportunities for the UK supply chain.”

“As we look to generate an economic recovery, clean rail technologies can help spur economic growth across the UK, whilst also helping our rail industry to develop a competitive advantage from which it could export more overseas too,” commented Railway Industry Association (RIA) technical director David Clarke.

 

The future of hydrogen in the UK

While unveiling the new train, Shapps also announced the DfT’s plans to transform the Tees Valley, a region in the north-east of England, into a hydrogen transport hub.

The plan’s aim is to invest in hydrogen as an alternative fuel while creating hundreds of jobs in the area. The DfT has commissioned a masterplan to understand the feasibility of the hub. The research, to be published in January 2021, will focus on how hydrogen can power buses, heavy goods rail, maritime and aviation across the UK.

Through the government-sponsored Hydrogen for Transport programme, £6.3m will be destined to a hydrogen refuelling station as well as 19-powered refuse vehicles in Glasgow.

“The announcement today on the further progress of the Hydrogen for Transport Programme is a demonstration of the UK Government’s commitment to developing a hydrogen infrastructure as part of its efforts to decarbonise transport and encourage the shift to zero-emission vehicles,” said techUK CEO Julian David.

“The introduction of fleets of low carbon, self-powered trains, alongside a rolling programme of electrification, can help ensure rail leads the country’s decarbonisation revolution, generating jobs and investment in the process,” added RIA’s Clarke.

 


 

Source: BBC UK

Source: Railway Technology