The big problem is finding consistency in the figures:-
Trowres is right about consistency. Very difficult to get 'proper' figures, which suggests to me that the figures are not as green as they ought to be. If they were, then the rail industry would be shouting loudly about their green credentials.
One of the things that the industry is not doing right concerns weight. Acceleration is a very important part of overall fuel consumption if you're doing regular stops as on
FGW▸ . The car industry has been reducing car weight over the last 20-odd years, as a way of reducing fuel consumption. Alas, the same is not true of trains.
An eight-car
HST▸ weighs 413.9 tonnes and has 480 seats (OK, there'll be a bit of variation in that depending whether we're talking high-density or not), which works out at 0.86 t/seat.
The same figure for some other stock works out at
Stock | Seats | Weight (t) | t/seat |
125 mile/h dmus |
HST | 480 | 413.9 | 0.86 |
Adelante | 268 | 260.5 | 0.97 |
Voyager (220) | 188 | 185.6 | 0.99 |
Super-Voyager (221) | 250 | 282.8 | 1.13 |
InterCity electrics |
East Coast class 91 + 10 coaches | 600 | 532.3 | 0.89 |
Eurostar | 383 | 360.7 | 0.94 |
Pendolino | 447 | 459.7 | 1.03 |
90/100 mile/h dmus |
Turbo (166) | 275 | 119.3 | 0.43 |
Class 170 | 190 | 134.6 | 0.71 |
Class 185 | 171 | 163.0 | 0.95 |
The figure for the Turbos is improved by the 2+3 seating that they've got. Even if you down-rated them to (say) 225 'real' seats, you'd still be achieving 0.53 t/seat.
In each category, you can see that weight/seat has been going up over the years (and with it, fuel consumption). The tilting Voyagers and First TransPennine's 185s are particularly poor performers.