Massive expansion of TGV Train Network Planned in France
Tuesday 02 September 2008
The French Government recently announced that it is to create around 2,000
kilometres of new lines for the TGV high-speed ‘bullet’ train.
Whilst French TGV trains traverse the country and beyond, for the most part
they run on conventional train lines, with the speed restrictions that inevitably poses.
The
trains travel up to around 320 km/h on the high-speed lines, which drops to
around 200 km/h on the main network.
Euro star is essentially a modified
TGV to cope with line restrictions in the UK, and the need to go through a
tunnel, something that does not occur on TGV lines in France.
There are
currently around 1750 km of high-speed lines (lignes à grande vitesse –
LGV), which will at least double by 2020 if the ambitions of the present
Government are realised.
The main new lines to be constructed include:
Tours - Bordeaux – A new 302 km line that is due to be in service in
2016. This is the prolongation of the TGV Atlantique route from Paris to
Tours that started operations in 1990. The new route will pass via Poitiers and
Angoulême. The objective will be to make possible Bordeaux to Paris in 2hrs, and
Lille to Bayonne in 6 hours.
Bordeaux – Spain – A 250 km extension of the TGV Atlantique
right through to Spain. Initial studies started this year, and will take about
two years to complete. No route for the line has yet been established. A new
line would then complete a high-speed link right through from Paris to Spain.
Paris – Strasbourg – The new TGV Est from Paris to Baudrecourt
started in June 2007 and it is planned to continue the line an additional 106
kms through to Strasbourg by 2015. This should make possible the journey time
Paris-Strasbourg in 1.5 hours.
Le Mans – Rennes – A 182 km extension of the TGV line that currently
runs from Paris to Le Mans, through to Rennes. The planned journey time from
Paris to Rennes is 1.30 hours, which will also mean a journey time of 3 hours
from Brest to Paris. It is planned that the line will be operational in 2014.
Dijon – Mulhouse – A 140 km line currently under construction and due
to open 2011. However, full funding for all of the line has yet to be put in
place.
Bordeaux – Toulouse – A new 200 km line that has long been discussed
and will hopefully now happen. The project has yet to be finalised, but the
plans are that the new line should be operational by 2016. It will cut the
present journey time in half to 1 hour. Ultimately, it is planned to link up
Bordeaux with Nice, via Montpelier and Marseilles.
Marseilles – Nice – A line that has also been in discussion for over
a decade, but on which agreement has yet to be reached. At present, the TGV line
goes to Marseilles, and it is proposed to provide up to 240 km of high-speed
line that links the city with Toulon and Nice. Alternatively, to route the line
via Aix en Provence, missing out Marseilles and Toulon. If the line happened, it
would reduce the current journey time of Paris to Nice from 5.5 hours to 4
hours.
Montpellier – Perpignan – Studies on a line to link Montpellier with
Barcelona will start next year. Works are currently in progress on a line from
Barcelona to the French border. It will make it possible to travel between
Montpellier and Barcelona in 1.5 hours.
Nimes – Montpellier – A project that has been approved, with works
due to start on this 60 km line in the next year or so. The line will also link
up to the existing line that ends at Avignon (where there is a spectacular TGV
station), to eventually create a high-speed line from Paris to Barcelona.
Since the initial announcement earlier this year few details
have been released by the Government, least of all on just how the construction
work will be funded. Whilst in the early years the lines were funded directly by
the Government, more recently it has been necessary to pull together a number of
funding ‘partners’, including the European Union.
The Government will
also be wary of opposition from local authorities and communities likely to be
adversely affected by the new lines. There were big protests during the 1990s
before the line was constructed to Marseilles, and protests also continue from
those affected by noise from TGV trains that now pass near towns and villages,
forcing SNCF to build acoustic fencing in those areas most affected by the
noise.
Accordingly, do not hold your breathe on the above timescales,
which may need to be adjusted in the light of political and financial realities!
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