Rail Users Ireland Forum

Go Back   Rail Users Ireland Forum > General Information & Discussion > Events, Happenings and Media
Register FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Unread 01-03-2016, 21:22   #1
ThomasJ
Member
 
ThomasJ's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Clonsilla
Posts: 2,812
Default [Article] EU critical of capital spending

Telling us what we already know

Quote:
The European Commission's annual country report on Ireland warns that the Government's capital spending programme is inadequate for the country's needs.

The Commission has said that over the next three years in particular, capital spending will be underfunded because the Government has chosen to prioritise tax cuts and current spending increases over investment.

This report is critical of the Government for prioritising tax cuts over investment spending, particularly in education, public transport, energy and water infrastructure.

It says seven years of sharply reduced spending has taken a toll on the quality and adequacy of infrastructure.

The report also says the new capital programme for the next government term will, even at its maximum point, leave spending one third lower than what it calls the already depressed EU average.

This, it warns, could negatively affect the country's growth prospects and the delivery of key public services.


It says a key weakness for the country is public transport in the car-dependent Dublin region.

The city is now ranked the ninth most congested of 200 cities worldwide at peak times - worse than Los Angeles, Beijing and Rio de Janeiro.
More here

http://www.rte.ie/news/business/2016...ission-report/

Last edited by ThomasJ : 01-03-2016 at 21:38.
ThomasJ is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 10:46   #2
Thomas J Stamp
Chairman/Publicity
 
Thomas J Stamp's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: The Home of Hurling
Posts: 2,708
Default

yes, it is stuff we already know, but we also know that DART Underground was scrapped to enable the Government to use the money to fund tax cuts and spending elsewhere.

Like extending Luas Red Line trams, Luas Cross City, DART to Malahide, replacing traffic light roundabouts on the M50, the PPT, DART Underground will one day happen, or else the city will lose its competitiveness. This week Garmin/Tom Tom reported that Dublin is the 9th most congested city in the world, great for the advertising.
__________________
We are the passengers
Thomas J Stamp is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 14:26   #3
Inniskeen
Really Regular Poster
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 951
Default

Problem with DART Underground is that it will signigantly degrade services for a large coterie of existing users due to inadequate capacity and infrastructure. It is an element but without additional tracks on the northern line and elsewhere it is of limited net benefit
Inniskeen is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 15:50   #4
James Shields
Member
 
James Shields's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Drogheda, Ireland
Posts: 1,275
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Inniskeen View Post
Problem with DART Underground is that it will signigantly degrade services for a large coterie of existing users due to inadequate capacity and infrastructure. It is an element but without additional tracks on the northern line and elsewhere it is of limited net benefit
What utter tosh. If you are travelling from somewhere on the northern DART line to somewhere on the southern DART line, you'll have a change at Pearse, but should still see a significant benefit from increased train paths and reduced conflicts. I agree that widening the northern line would be massively beneficial, and will eventually be necessary, but extra tracks without the interconnector will only provide limited benefit as there's nowhere for extra trains to go at present, while the interconnector would provide huge benefit to the existing network and open up a huge area of the city centre to rail users.

Sorry to dismiss your assertion, but a minor inconvenience to your current journey is not a significant degradation of service.

James
James Shields is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 17:51   #5
Inniskeen
Really Regular Poster
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 951
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by James Shields View Post
What utter tosh. If you are travelling from somewhere on the northern DART line to somewhere on the southern DART line, you'll have a change at Pearse, but should still see a significant benefit from increased train paths and reduced conflicts. I agree that widening the northern line would be massively beneficial, and will eventually be necessary, but extra tracks without the interconnector will only provide limited benefit as there's nowhere for extra trains to go at present, while the interconnector would provide huge benefit to the existing network and open up a huge area of the city centre to rail users.

Sorry to dismiss your assertion, but a minor inconvenience to your current journey is not a significant degradation of service.

James
Well James if you are travelling from Howth, Sutton or Bayside to Lansdowne Road you would change twice as I understand these proposals, once at Howth Junction and again at Pearse.

We need a little bit of honesty around DART Underground. Let us see the proposed timetables and journey times. It is mathematically obvious from reading the business plan that passengers from Malahide northwards can anticipate journey time increases to/from the City Centre ranging from a few minutes in the case of Malahide to anything up to half an hour in the case of Drogheda, Dundalk and points north.

Look at what has happened on the south side, what is happenning with Sligo services, almost every timetable produces journey time increases making the railway less and less attractive to longer distance commuters. DART Underground will comprehensively congest the northern line and reduce everything to the average speed of DART, barely 20 mph. Not a great prospect, I am afraid.
Inniskeen is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 15:54   #6
James Howard
Really Really Regluar Poster
 
James Howard's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Sligo Line
Posts: 1,115
Default

The thing is that Dublin has the bones of great infrastructure in place, it's just that without a proper plan, we can't really benefit from it.

Present industrial strife notwithstanding, LUAS has been the real success story in Dublin transport over the last 20 years. It carries roughly the same load as Irish Rail in Dublin and the whole system was built for around a billion euro. Much as I'd like to see stuff like DART underground built, on previous evidence, all I see as a result of investment in Irish Rail is further deterioration in journey times and reliability.

As Inniskeen said, DART underground won't really solve any problems that can't be solved between the PPT and LUAS without doubling down and sorting out the northern line. So without a plan to continue on, it is a waste of money.
James Howard is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 19:05   #7
Colm Moore
Local Liaison Officer
 
Colm Moore's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 5,442
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by James Howard View Post
Present industrial strife notwithstanding, LUAS has been the real success story in Dublin transport over the last 20 years. It carries roughly the same load as Irish Rail in Dublin and the whole system was built for around a billion euro.
I think its closer to about €1.2 billion

If I'm correct:
Luas A, B, C, C(S) €780 million
Luas A1 €90 million
Luas B1 €300 million
Luas C1 €45 million
Luas BXD €375 million
Minor works and extra trams ???
__________________
Colm Moore is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 20:40   #8
James Howard
Really Really Regluar Poster
 
James Howard's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Sligo Line
Posts: 1,115
Default

If you're talking about adding half an hour to Drogheda, that would wipe out the northern commuter service. Already, the railway is only barely competitive with bus services from Drogheda.
James Howard is offline   Reply With Quote
Unread 02-03-2016, 20:41   #9
Inniskeen
Really Regular Poster
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 951
Default

There is considerable potential in the Dublin rail network but lack of game changing investment is a major impediment to making rail seriously relevant in the GDA and beyond. Lowest common denominator operations (governed by the slowest service) on inflexible double track infrastructure is of limited economic value as it is impossible to offer both frequent inner suburban services, fast outer suburban services, inter-city and a worthwhile airport service, all of which are required to maximise potential.
Inniskeen is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 21:37.


Powered by vBulletin
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.