The sleeper train is dead - long live the sleeper trains??
From
the International Railway JournalSBB says demand for international rail services has grown significantly during the first half of this year, aided by increasing awareness of sustainability and measures to protect the climate.
As ÖBB’s Nightjet service linking Zürich and Basle with Berlin and Hamburg has reached its maximum capacity due to strong growth, the two railways are studying how to meet demand. The overnight service between Zürich, Innsbruck, Salzburg and Prague is currently operated only with sleeping cars, so the two railways together with Czech Railway (CD▸ ) are examining whether couchette cars can be added to the train.
SBB and ÖBB are also assessing which cities can be added to the Nightjet network to provide more overnight connections to Switzerland – Zürich is already the second biggest hub for overnight services in Europe after Vienna.
In addition, the two operators are keen to improve the economic viability of overnight trains through initiatives such as a CO2 levy and reducing track access charges.
Other threads on the Coffee Shop describe the decimation of sleeper trains in France, and regret the reduction of such trains in the
UK▸ where you can no longer catch a sleeper from Newhaven to Perth or from Euston to Holyhead. Problems range from the uneconomic use of sleeper carriages through the "spray" question of where they should actually go ... to the (frankly) unpleasant wait around in Waverly or Central or Euston for the late, late departure after a business meeting ending by 5 p.m.
As I write, the UK's future relationship with the rest of Europe is unclear and any serious speculation as to rebirth of sleeper services from / via England to mainland Europe would be out of tune with stability - but I bring you a couple of graphics and ask "what if" ... and looking not to 2020 but to 2030 or 2040.