Transcript Document

RAIL TRANSPORT SEMINAR:
RAILWAY INFRASTRUCTURE – KEY
TO ACHIEVE SUSTAINABLE
TRANSPORT
Operation on the Bulgarian railway market –
current situation and challenges facing the freight
forwarders in Bulgaria
Dr. Ivan Petrov
General Manager - Trans Express
Sofia, 21.01.2015
GENERAL CONDITIONS ON THE RAIL
MARKET IN BULGARIA
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Limited cargo committed to rail;
Profile of the economy;
Transit shipments of bigger importance;
Lack of adequate infrastructure and many problems with longer
trips, stops in traffic;
Rail operators in Bulgaria are better than most in neighboring
countries;
Rail charges in Bulgaria are higher than trucking charges;
Private rail operators – cherry picking attitude;
Single wagonload vs. truck – the only potential for development of
rail business.
WHAT IS THE SINGLE WAGONLOAD?
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The transport of freight in individual railway wagons or groups
of wagons (the shipment is less than a whole trainload).
The SWL supply includes grouping and sorting of wagons in
order to assembly full trains with different shipments, in order to
take advantage of the full train size and, thus, increasing the
productivity.
Grouping / sorting can take place through marshalling in
dedicated yards where each train is disassembled and the groups
of wagons are classified to form new full load trains for the next
yard, or more simplified arrangement with removal / addition of
groups of wagons at intermediate stops.
Any kind of wagons including the one loaded with combined
transport units can be moved in SWL supply chain
Source: Study on Single Wagonload Traffic in Europe • Objectives, results and recommendations - PwC
HOW IT IS PRODUCED
 The studies analysed a number of SWL
production models in terms of type of
network, related drivers, level of flexibility,
etc.
Connected
Hubs
 Three production models appear to be the
most relevant in the Countries examined in
detail
 Network structure is in most cases supplyoriented aiming at optimising SWL
productivity against demand
constraints in terms of distribution,
frequency, balance between directions etc.
 Main challenge is to design the network in a
way allowing the respect of demand
requirements in particular in terms of pickup & delivery time constraints
 The production models adopted by
main RUs govern the utilisation of
relevant infrastructure (main and small
marshalling yards, freight stations etc.)
2-level
connected
hubs
Corridor
Source: Study on Single Wagonload Traffic in Europe • Objectives, results and recommendations - PwC
HOW IT IS PRODUCED
 The complexity of the SWL production chain imply that also the cost structure is relatively
complex.
intermarshalling yards
trains
intermediate marshalling
services
marshalling services O/D
distribution level 1 trains
5%
9%
15%
10%
5%
13%
14%
7%
6%
15%
shunting services node
stations
distribution level 2 trains
infrastructure charges
wagon costs
commercial costs
overhead costs
 For a typical shipment, the main leg (intermarshalling yards trains) costs just 13% of the
total, + 10% for charges for track access, in total
23%.
 Marshalling yards services in first and last
marshalling yards are 15% of total costs. If we
consider also the intermediate marshalling (7%),
the total marshalling costs represent 22% of the
total.
 Distribution costs (distribution trains +
sorting at node stations) excluding marshalling
yards services costs in first and last marshalling
yards are 25 % of total costs,
 Commercial costs and overhead represent
the remaining 20%.
 Cost structures appear to be quite different among the RUs for which data are available
 Specific "local" factors appears to have a strong impacts (e.g. level of infrastructure charges,
average length of the "long haul" trips, adopted production models etc.)
Source: Study on Single Wagonload Traffic in Europe • Objectives, results and recommendations - PwC
WHAT IS FREIGHT CORRIDOR
Different from
national rail paths
Not bound on
national legal acts
Harmonized business
conditions
Legally authorized to
underline further
harmonization steps
Business
interoperability
PRODUCT
PROJECT
TRAIN PATH
ORGANIZATION
Secretariat
Open access
Utilizing
infrastructure
Authorized applicants
One-stop-shop
Operators
Working groups
Terminals
RAIL FREIGHT CORRIDORS
Infrastructure requirements on the Core Network (rail freight)
by the European Commission:
 740m train length
 22,5 t axle-load
 100 km/h line speed
 ERTMS
 Electrification
 To be achieved until 2030
CORE PORTS, TERMINALS AND
INTERMODAL SERVICES
Terminals Design Parameters
Mandatory
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Efficient rail access
Efficient road access
Non-exclusive, so open to all users
Capability of receiving full trains
740m minimum, 2-4 tracks
Optionally
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Surface with extension option
Inclusion of empty container depot
Sufficient Stacking capacity
24/7/52 year round operation
Handling of dangerous goods
Secured, accommodating extended
customs gate solution
State-of-art ICT connections
Future Project Trans Express
BENCHMARK
Thank you!