Rail & Road
U.S. Rail Transport Embraces Hydrogen Technology: How It’s Changing Travel and Business
Saturday, July 12, 2025
The introduction of hydrogen-powered trains is expanding the frontier of U.S. railway transport, offering cleaner, greener alternatives to typical diesel-powered locomotives. The new technological innovation, however, requires a complete replacement of railway infrastructure, protection installations, and functioning systems. Hydrogen trains are becoming more and more a replacement to reduce emissions in the transport industry, yet a shift to the technology entails many problems. These include the building up of new hydrogen fueling and maintenance stations, staff retraining, and tunnel system upgrading to new protection requirements.
Industry leaders from Jacobs, HDR, Ricardo LLC, and the San Bernardino County Transportation Authority (SBCTA) recently gathered to discuss hydrogen-powered rail preparedness at the recent APTA Rail Conference. The conference fostered a discussion on ground-level practical issues and technicalities spawned by applying fuel cell technology to the US railway system. The conversation centered on the industry needing to redesign its assumptions from fuel storage to fire protection to assist the US on the path to a greener future for its railways.
Transitioning to Hydrogen: The Case For Purpose-Built Infrastructure
The hydrogen fuel is sold as a cleaner fuel to substitute common diesel engines, while hydrogen behaves otherwise within utilization settings. Hydrogen requires special care, Jacobs’ Martin Schroeder elaborates, while hydrogen itself is very inflammable. Hydrogen trains require upgrade infrastructure, e.g., tunnels, refueling, and maintenance infrastructure, to function effectively. The upgrade is essential while hydrogen requires stored and special refueling procedure to prevent the risk of accidents.
The SBCTA opens the way to hydrogen rail utilization within the US, and its FLIRT H2 hydrogen fuel train will enter service in August 2025. The agency has invested to build special-purpose buildings to house hydrogen fueling and maintenance. The facility has advanced protection features like deflagration panels, gas detectors, and automatic shut-off capability to contain hydrogen safely.
The SBCTA project was not just choosing green trains, but new protection features specially adapted to hydrogen’s characteristics, the SBCTA’s Joy Buenaflor explained, highlighting that the project was much broader than just choosing a green train—with new protection procedures, training staff, and reconsidering ventilation on tunnels and depots among them.
Hydrogen Train Safety: Tunnel and Emergency Preparation Focus
The protection of hydrogen-powered trains remains center focus, especially when risks are being discussed within tunnels. The dispersion characteristics of hydrogen are much distinct from diesel or electric trains, and therefore, emergency conditions within enclosed spaces should be kept in view accordingly. Schroeder elaborated further on the aspect that airflow simulations within tunnels are highly relevant to hydrogen dispersion while there are leaks. Appropriate ventilation within tunnels reduces the possibilities of fire, playing an important role to prevent accidents.
Also, fire departments know how to work alongside hydrogen-powered trains while responding to emergencies. Hydrogen-powered trains are not riskier or more dangerous to ride on than diesel-powered trains, but responding to hydrogen leaks while there’s an emergency situation requires different procedure. HDR’s Marcin Taraszkiewicz went on to say that fire departments should be trained on responding to these units just in case there’s an emergency situation or fire. He suggested that protection procedure to work on hydrogen trains isn’t to avoid fires only—they’re to know the right procedure to follow when there’s an issue.
The SBCTA was one better by training local first responders along the way. Acclimating them to the new facility and to the nuances of hydrogen-powered trains such that during an emergency, response teams will know just what to expect and won’t hesitate to act on those expectations.
Business and Travel Impact: What Hydrogen Trains Will Mean to the U.S. Rail Industry The transition to hydrogen trains has countless environmental,commercial, and tourism repercussions. As the United States’train industry moves to greener technologies, there will certainly be further incentive to opt for green means of transport. For corporate travelers, hydrogen trains deliver a new, green means to travel that will increasingly become prominent within corporate calendars as companies look to meet their sustainability goals.
For tourists, the shift to hydrogen trains could mean more viable, climate-compatible means to travel on long-distance journeys within the United States. The green status of hydrogen-powered railway travel may encourage tourists to choose to journey by railway instead of airliner, especially to places where railway links are strong. This could, in its own right, translate to additional train routes, which are able to link additional regions and cities in an eco-friendly way.
Nonetheless, the hydrogen train conversion will not take place overnight. The infrastructure to support such trains, including refueling and maintenance depots, is still being created. Passengers who anticipate traveling on hydrogen-powered trains should ask about schedules within their routes of such trains because they are still being tested and rolled out.
Fast Facts and Travelers’ Guide to Hydrogen-Fueled Rail
Stay Up to Date on New Routes: When hydrogen trains come into service, stay informed about new service and new route introductions by railway suppliers. The trains will take a number of years before they travel on all major routes.
Support Sustainable Travel: Opt for greener travel methods whenever you can. Hydrogen-powered trains reduce the carbon footprint of long-distance travel.
Be Prepared for Travel Infrastructure Upgrades: As the railway sector approaches switching to hydrogen technology, there are certainly stations and infrastructure that are being established or upgraded to receive such trains.
Stay Current on Safety Precautions: Riding on a hydrogen train, you should know that hydrogen trains are highly safe to ride on. Emergency procedures and staff training are being highlighted to mitigate risk and create a safe traveling experience.
Consider Travel by Train on Business: Hydrogen trains can be an attractive mode of travel by businessmen who want an environmentally friendly way to journey between cities within the U.S. and reduce their environmental impact to zero.
Towards the Green Future of US Rail Travel The introduction of hydrogen trains to America is a big step into the future for the country’s railway network. While the upgrade involves large-scale investing on infrastructure and training of personnel, the long-range benefit to the environment and to the industry of tourism is real.
Hydrogen-powered railway, as an alternative to the traditional diesel trains, holds the promise to revolutionize the manner by which Americans travel, offering a cleaner, greener means to travel, not just to travel and tourism, but even to companies, as well. As a trailblazer to hydrogen railways, US train travel’s future has never looked greener and technological before. As a regular leisure or business traveler, hydrogen trains will give a novel, cleaner means to travel up and down within the US within the near future.
Tags: California, Eco-Friendly Transportation, Flinders, fuel cell trains, green transportation, HDR, hydrogen rail safety, Hydrogen Rail Technology, hydrogen trains, Hydrogen-Powered Rail, Jacobs, Los Angeles, Rail Innovation, san bernardino county, SBCTA, sustainable travel, U.S. Business Travel, U.S. Rail Industry, U.S. Rail Travel, United States
Rail & Road
London-Berlin trains on the drawing board for UK-German rail taskforce | Rail industry
Plans for possible direct trains from London to Berlin will be drawn up by a joint UK-German taskforce, reigniting hopes for better rail connections across Europe.
The partnership, announced as part of the bilateral treaty to be signed by the British prime minister, Keir Starmer, and his German counterpart, Friedrich Merz, could eventually lead to direct rail services between the two countries after previous plans for London-Frankfurt trains hit the buffers.
The Department for Transport described the agreement as a “significant step forward”, with direct trains the most eye-catching part of a commitment to collaborate in enhancing sustainable transport links and mobility.
Germany has also agreed to allow some arriving UK airline passengers to use passport e-gates at its airports by the end of August, the Cabinet Office said.
Since Brexit, UK travellers have needed to queue to have their passports manually stamped, rather than use automated gates, at EU airports.
A joint taskforce will bring together transport experts from Germany and the UK to tackle the issues that have blocked such services in the past, including commercial, safety and technical requirements, and, not least, border arrangements.
The transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, raised the possibility of visiting Checkpoint Charlie “direct from the comfort of a train”, adding that the government was “determined to put Britain at the heart of a better-connected continent”.
She said: “The Brandenburg Gate, the Berlin Wall and Checkpoint Charlie – in just a matter of years, rail passengers in the UK could be able to visit these iconic sights direct from the comfort of a train, thanks to a direct connection linking London and Berlin.
“This landmark agreement – part of a new treaty the prime minister will sign with Chancellor Merz today – has the potential to fundamentally change how millions of people travel between our two countries, offering a faster, more convenient and significantly greener alternative to flying.
“The economic potential is enormous. A direct rail link would support the creation of jobs and strengthen the vital trade links that underpin our economic relationship with Germany. British businesses will have better access to European markets, whilst German companies will find it easier to invest and operate in the UK.”
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While direct trains to new European countries may be at least a decade away, the international train operator Eurostar has spoken of its ambition to open new routes to Frankfurt and Geneva. Other potential rival operators, including Virgin, are hoping to start cross-Channel services.
Opening new routes has been difficult due to commercial viability, different track and train systems, and border requirements and station capacity. Eurostar’s longest direct route to date, London to Amsterdam, has had to overcome numerous difficulties, largely linked to border security and passport control, since its delayed inception in 2018.
The demand for direct London-Berlin trains is unclear. Passengers can travel between the UK and German capitals in about 10 hours, changing in Brussels and Cologne.
Rail & Road
Regulator’s report on rail assistance ‘shows it is still failing to acknowledge right to turn up and go’ – Disability News Service
The rail regulator has been asked why it has failed to do more in an annual report to stress disabled people’s right to “turn up and go” when accessing the railway network.
The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) released new figures this week which showed that satisfaction with booked passenger assistance on the rail network had plateaued, with one in 10 disabled passengers still not even being met at the station after booking help.
The proportion of passengers who received all the assistance they booked also remained stable in 2024-25 at just 78 per cent.
This was even lower for passengers with a “learning, concentrating or remembering disability” (73 per cent); with mental health conditions (72 per cent); those who are neurodivergent (72 per cent); and passengers with a communication impairment (73 per cent).
There were also figures showing what proportion of passengers were satisfied with the assistance they received, with the booking process, and with the helpfulness and attitude of staff.
But there were no similar figures to show the levels of satisfaction for disabled passengers who turn up at a rail station and request assistance with their journey without booking it in advance, which is their legal right.
The report on disabled people’s experiences of Passenger Assist was released alongside ORR’s Annual Rail Consumer Report.
Accessible transport campaigners have been highlighting for years the failure of the rail industry and successive governments to ensure disabled people’s right to spontaneous travel by denying their right to turn up and go (TUAG) across the rail network.
The ORR annual report appears to underline that failure by focusing on pre-booked passenger assistance.
It says only that it is “working with industry to strengthen the quality of data on turn up and go assistance requests”, and that it expects the “quality and completeness to improve over time”.
The only TUAG figures released by ORR this week show the number of TUAG requests made in 2023-24 and 2023-24 (about 312,000 in 2023-24 and about 491,000 in 2024-25), although notes published alongside these figures show they are likely to be unreliable*.
It is the first time such TUAG figures have been published.
Doug Paulley, one of the disabled activists who has highlighted the right to TUAG in his campaigning, said he had a “significant concern” about ORR’s “concentration on assistance booking rather than TUAG” in its “uninspiring” report.
He said ORR did not have reliable or useful statistics on how well rail companies were doing on TUAG.
He said: “Everything they measure or do is about booked assistance: satisfaction with booked assistance, recompense for failed booked assistance…
“It feels like they try to avoid mentioning or acknowledging our right to turn up and go.”
He said this was a “disturbing and counter-productive trend”.
Responding to these concerns, ORR said it was exploring with rail operators “how we might get a better picture of the experience of passengers who request assistance on demand”, including the potential for TUAG passengers to be asked to take part in its existing passenger survey of experiences of assistance.
ORR released figures in the Passenger Assist report that ranked each rail operator on their performance on booked passenger assistance.
It showed that Northern Trains was the worst performer, with only 70 per cent of disabled passengers who were met at the station then receiving all the assistance they had booked, with Transport for Wales (74 per cent) and West Midlands Trains (74 per cent) also performing poorly.
The best performer was London North Eastern Railway (85 per cent).
The annual report notes how ORR has raised concerns through the year about passenger assistance; the reliability of help points at stations; communications between staff at boarding and destination stations when arranging passenger assistance; the reliability of passenger lifts at stations; the provision of accessible rail replacement vehicles; and the complaints process for disabled passengers.
The report points to annual data that shows a 42 per cent increase in the number of faults across the rail network that put lifts out of service for over a week, in 2024-25 compared with the previous year.
Commenting on the report, Stephanie Tobyn, ORR’s director of strategy, policy and reform, said: “Ensuring that disabled passengers consistently receive the support they need to travel by train requires clear focus, collaboration and a commitment to continuous improvement.
“Our latest survey shows that overall passenger satisfaction has plateaued, and we know that, in some instances, assistance failures can leave passengers feeling powerless and frustrated.”
She said that a new rating system on passenger assistance would “help us target our efforts and use resources effectively, focusing on working with those operators where improvement is most needed to deliver better outcomes for passengers”.
*ORR says in its notes that the only TUAG requests recorded are those noted by staff via the Passenger Assist system, while not all rail operators are yet using this system to record TUAG requests, and any requests booked less than two hours before departure are treated as TUAG
Picture by ORR
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Rail & Road
Over-dependence bulk freight hamstrings railway revenues: Study – Industry News
The Indian Railways‘ over-dependence on bulk commodities like coal, iron ore and cement is hurting its growth potential and exposing it to the competitive pressure from other modes of freight transportation, a PwC-FICCI report said.
Strategic Opportunities
The unreliable services coupled with inflexible routes and poor timeliness are affecting the railways’ potential to grab a bigger market share in the “high-value” non-bulk commodities space, it said.
Even though the rail transport, particularly over long distances, offers inherent cost efficiencies compared with road transport, its infrastructure, terminal operations, and rolling stocks are not designed to handle the fast-growing segments like e-commerce, pharmaceuticals, FMCG, consumer durables and automobiles.
“These commodities demand more flexible, time-sensitive, door-to-door logistics, which road transport is better equipped to provide, rendering rail less competitive for such segments,” the report noted.
In the past five years, a large part of the railways’ freight volume growth – 5.6% CAGR – is contributing by a narrow set of traditional bulk commodities. Currently, coal dominates the railways’ freight basket accounting for arounf 50% of the freight volumes, followed by cement and iron ore, contributing around 10% each. But the growth in these bulk commodities are slowing down due to the structural limitations within rail logistics. On the other hand, the growth in emerging non-bulk commodities stood at 10% over the same period.
“A network that is optimised for bulk train operations may struggle to accommodate growing demand for parcel/lightweight goods or automobile transport, leading to capacity mismatches and service shortfalls,” it adds.
However, the report said that targeted interventions can boost the movement of lightweight commodities and enable greater diversification of the rail freight portfolio. “In India, more than 90% of the non-bulk freight market is transported by road. By contrast, in developed countries such as the US, 66% of non-bulk freight is moved by road, with rail or rail-intermodal systems accounting for a substantial 30%. This modal imbalance presents a strategic opportunity for IR to expand its footprint in the non-bulk segment,” the report noted.
Challenges
Though the railways has made efforts in the recent years to promote non-bulk segment. For instance, Joint Parcel Product–Railways Cargo Service (JPPRCS) scheme was introduced in 2023 to provide end-to-end logistics solutions for parcel. Similarly, Parcel Cargo Express Train (PCET) was launched this year to boost the transport of commodities like rubber and pineapples. But the modal share of rail for parcel-based cargo and lightweight commodities still remains low. The report further said that railways needs to adopt a commodity-specific approach to terminal planning, asset deployment and service design to diversify its commodity portfolio.
“Another opportunity lies in the automobile sector, specifically two-wheelers and passenger vehicles, which fall under the low rail share category but exhibit strong growth forecasts. The railways has focused on this segment by modifying the AFTO scheme, introducing modern rolling stock (NMG and BCACBM coaches) and assisting the development of new automobile loading terminals. These efforts have increased the modal share of rail in automobile transport from 1.2% in FY14 to approximately 20% in FY24,” the report said.
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