Inquiry into integration of regional rail and road networks and their interface with ports
  
    | 4.1  | 
    This chapter examines regional rail issues that  do not relate directly to a particular port. Where a port is directly involved,  the problem has been included in Chapter 3.  | 
  
  
    | 4.2 | 
    The decline of rail’s share of the freight  transport market has resulted in large quantities of freight that were formerly  moved by rail, now being moved by truck. The difficulties that this presents  are, firstly, that the rural roads are generally not built to handle heavy  freight vehicles like B-doubles; secondly, and following on from the first  problem, is that rural councils do not have a sufficient funds to cope with the  additional road damage caused by the larger vehicles.  | 
  
  
    | 4.3 | 
    Added to these problems are greater levels of  pollution, the danger of mixing local traffic with heavy vehicles on country  roads and through small towns, and the additional noise levels produced by  large numbers of heavy vehicles.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Increasing Rail’s Share of the Task | 
    
  
    | 4.4  | 
    As discussed in Chapter 2, governments are  giving considerable attention to the task of increasing the proportion of total  freight being carried by rail. This chapter looks at areas where there is a  particular need for rapid improvement in a rail link; where current work is  expected to produce timely results; and also at some proposed projects that  were brought to the Committee’s  attention. The latter projects have the potential to markedly improve  efficiency and/or safety in the rail network.  | 
  
  
    | 4.5  | 
    The projects vary widely in their cost and  complexity; from a “missing link” in the connection between a port and the  coalfields, to a grade separation, duplication of tracks for passing loops, or  the long discussed Southern Sydney Freight Line.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    The East Coast | 
    
  
    | 4.6  | 
    The rail network on the eastern seaboard has  several very difficult problems. For example: 
      - access  to Sydney  from the south, north and west;
 
      - the line from the Queensland  border to Brisbane;
 
      - Southern  Sydney Freight Line;
 
      - Hunter Valley  Coal Chain;
 
      - missing  rail links in the Hunter Valley;
 
      - the line through or around the Toowoomba Ranges;
 
      - missing rail links in the Queensland coal fields;
 
      - rail connectivity in Victoria  and across the border to South Australia.
   | 
  
  
    | 4.7 | 
    To achieve an efficient transport network for  the eastern states it is vital that these problems be faced, and solved, as  soon as possible. The difficulty is that to overcome each of these problems  will require a great deal of infrastructure investment. The amounts involved  are such, that only a co-operative approach, involving all three levels of  government and private enterprise investors, will be able to overcome the  difficulties.  | 
  
  
    | 4.8  | 
    One such problem is the difficult access to Sydney  for freight from Melbourne  and from points to the west of Sydney. If this can be  solved, the additional freight volumes would almost guarantee the success of a Melbourne  to Queensland  freight line, to say nothing of the speed and efficiency gains. It would also  relieve the pressure on the road networks, especially the Hume Highway, and on  the coastal rail route.  | 
  
  
    | 4.9  | 
    A second problem also concerns access to Sydney.  The rail route to the north from Sydney has been described as  “…an infrastructure nightmare”. It was said to be: 
  … a bit of a goat track. It winds its way slowly towards Brisbane  and sometimes goes around in circles to get to Brisbane…1         | 
  
  
    | 4.10 | 
    The other main problem area is the route from  the Queensland  border to Brisbane.  There are a number of alternative proposals for this part of the freight route.  Toowoomba is keen to see a freight hub developed at Charlton and the  construction of a much faster, higher capacity, rail route down the Toowoomba Range and through the Little Liverpool  Range to Brisbane.  Others favour by-passing Toowoomba and going through Warwick  and the Border (or McPherson) Ranges.  | 
  
  
    | 4.11 | 
    The Australian Transport and Energy Corridor  (ATEC) estimated that the cost of getting through the ranges to Brisbane will  be more than the cost of improving the line from Melbourne to  Toowoomba: 
      We can get from Melbourne to Toowoomba for $800  million. That is an upgrading of existing rail tracks and the building of the  new connecting parts which would cross the border into Queensland and would go from Inglewood to Millmerran.  
       
  …Varying costs have been put forward for the track between  Toowoomba and Brisbane. I have seen widely differing  costs, depending who does it. …The cost of getting from Toowoomba to the port of Brisbane could be anything up to $2  billion, depending upon who you are talking to, how many people are removed  from their houses and what other issues come up.2         | 
  
  
    | 4.12 | 
    One of the real problems in the system is that  several parts of Victoria are isolated from  the national standard gauge network. Mildura, the Western District, the  Wimmera, the Green Triangle and Gippsland, all have serious difficulties in  connecting with the national network.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Southern Sydney   Freight Line | 
    
  
    | 4.13  | 
    The growing congestion on access lines to Sydney  and the need for freight trains to compete with passenger trains has made  improving freight access to the Sydney ports a high  priority.  | 
  
  
    | 4.14 | 
    The ARTC has announced plans to build a new  freight-only line through south western Sydney.  This project, the Southern Sydney Freight Line (SSFL), involves a total  investment of about $200 million and will allow passenger and freight services  to operate independently.3         | 
  
  
    | 4.15 | 
    The proposal is that the new freight line will  allow speeds up to 110 km an hour at 21 tonne axle loads and 80 km an hour at  23 tonnes. Signalling systems will be upgraded to allow for operations on the  new line, and an 1800 metre crossing loop will be provided between Macarthur and Sefton   Park junction.4         | 
  
  
    | 4.16 | 
    On 21 December 2006, the NSW Department of Planning announced  that approval had been given for the project to go ahead. The route approved  covers 30 km from Macarthur to Sefton (near  Chullora).5 As indicated in Chapter 3, completion of the project is a vital part of the  plans for the development of both Port Botany and Port Kembla.         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Hunter Valley Coal Chain | 
    
  
    | 4.17  | 
    In the late 1990s, the rapid increase in demand  for coal exports made unexpected demands on coal delivery systems. In Newcastle, capacity  pressures began to reach problem dimensions and a substantial queue of ships  lined up at the port. The operators in the Hunter Valley responded by forming  the Hunter Valley Coal Chain (HVCC), a group involving parties from all sectors  of the coal delivery system.  | 
  
  
    | 4.18 | 
    The group was faced with a projected growth of  over 50 per cent in thermal coal exports in the next five to ten years. Its  aims were to maximise asset utilisation, promote efficient investment decision  making and to co-ordinate timely investment in new track, rolling stock and  port infrastructure.6         | 
  
  
    | 4.19 | 
    By co-operating and planning as if they were a  single entity, the companies in the group increased throughput by 17 per cent,  without any substantial changes to infrastructure.  | 
  
  
    | 4.20 | 
    Toll Holdings, commenting on the success of the  HVCC, said that the idea was based on the efficiencies achieved in the Pilbara: 
      The Pilbara is the world class railway  because it is operated as one supply chain from mine to port and onto the ship.  We thought we needed to bring that same approach to the Hunter Valley and  because there were capacity constraints looming in the Hunter Valley we were  able to get around the table with the principal mining companies, the port and  [the] Rail Infrastructure Corporation and the New South  Wales government and start the process of bringing it all together.7          | 
  
  
    | 4.21  | 
    The  ARTC is also planning to improve the network, by a substantial investment  towards upgrading the Hunter   Valley system: 
  …version 6 of the Hunter Valley  strategy…has improved our investment, subject to the coal industry’s approval,  from $200-odd million to $385 million over the next five years. That will  increase the present capacity on the…coal framework from about 90 million  tonnes per annum to somewhere in the order of 160 million tonnes per annum by  2008-09, and that…subject to port improvements and the construction of  additional capacity to ports, will adequately take care of capacity. 
   
  …it would make Newcastle by far the  biggest coal-exporting port in the world.8         | 
  
  
    | 4.22  | 
    The Committee considered that the idea of running a  supply chain as a single entity is one that could be applicable in other areas.  There are efficiencies to be gained through methods such as: co-operation in  planning schedules for line access, carrying out maintenance on all sectors at  the same time to reduce stoppage times, and close liaison with the port  authorities to ensure that the right product is available for loading when  needed. This approach could increase throughput and save the stakeholders from  incurring unnecessary demurrage charges.  | 
  
  
    | 4.23 | 
    The  Committee’s view coincided with that of the Exports and Infrastructure Task  Force: 
      One of the success  stories noted by the taskforce during the course of its consultations were the  results of teams established to improve logistics chain operations… [including]  the Hunter Valley Coal Chain Logistics Team. 
      The taskforce sees  merit in improved co-ordination and co-operation between members of logistics  chains if it can improve effective capacity and efficiency, thereby potentially  negating the need for some additional investment in infrastructure. 
       
      The taskforce  suggests that the Department of Transport and Regional Services facilitate the  establishment of such groups for logistics chains of national importance either  directly or via relevant industry organisations.9          | 
  
  
    | 4.24 | 
    The Committee felt that a one-off grant of $250,000  should be provided for the establishment of a position of Transport Chain  
      Co-ordinator, with a small secretariat. This would be made available when the  Minister considered that a workable model had been proposed, by State/local  authorities and/or private interests. After the first year, the cost of the  Co-ordinator and the secretariat would become the responsibility of the chain  operatives.  | 
  
  
    | 4.25 | 
    Recommendation 8The Committee  recommends urgent consideration by the Minister for Transport and Regional  Services of the techniques used in the Hunter Valley  Coal Chain, for application to other transport chains. It also recommends that,  at Ministerial discretion, a grant of $250,000 be made available on a one-off  basis, for the establishment of a position of Chain Co-ordinator and the  provision of a small secretariat.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    The Hunter Valley “Missing Links” | 
    
  
    | 4.26 | 
    The rail connections in the Hunter valley, like the coalfields in Queensland, have  “missing links”. The first of these is a 70 km gap between Merrygoen and  Gulgong. The Hunter Business Chamber commented on the difficulties caused by  this gap: 
      Those 70 kilometres  of rail track are missing. To get from Dubbo to Newcastle, they come down to Merrygoen, they  push back up to Binnaway, and they then re-hook and come around, down through  Werris Creek, into Newcastle.  
      It is very costly  for business, particularly in regional New    South Wales, where you are trying to be sustainable  to give communities west of the range an opportunity to develop industry and a  whole range of things but also to get their grain products and everything to  the markets.10          | 
  
  
    | 4.27 | 
    The  Chamber estimated that construction would cost $50 -70 million and said the  line would open up the track from Parkes to Newcastle. It said that: 
      The chambers of  commerce in Dubbo and also in Orange—and  everywhere through the north-west—people have been to us at the business  chamber to say: ‘We want to do business with Newcastle and do it through Newcastle.’11          | 
  
  
    | 4.28 | 
    In its  submission, the Chamber said further value would be added by duplication of the  line east of Muswellbrook, on the Central West link. The advantages offered by  completion of the Gulgong-Merrygoen link would be: reduced freight traffic  impact in metropolitan areas; better access to the port of Newcastle;  faster links and lower costs; and no further need for multi-handling of  containers at Ingleburn. The line would also offer a direct connection to the  proposed Inland Freight Line from Melbourne to Queensland.12         | 
  
  
    | 4.29 | 
    The  second “missing link” in the Hunter  area is the proposed Ardglen tunnel, on the line from Willow Tree to Murrurundi  and Scone. Here the proposal is for a 6 km  tunnel at Ardglen that would cut travel time by 40 minutes and save 750,000  litres of diesel a year.13         | 
  
  
    | 4.30 | 
    The  cost has been estimated at $180-200 million and the private sector has offered  to build the tunnel; the ARTC is also said to be examining the project. The  chamber said that if the tunnel is not built, it will be an important  opportunity lost for NSW: 
      It is the opinion of  the business chamber—and particularly of those at Tamworth  and those places in the north—that they will start doing business and trade and  sending their commodities through to Brisbane and to Gladstone. So  from a point from, say, north of Dubbo right through to Queensland, the state of New South Wales will lose an opportunity to  go through to that area.  
       
      That tunnel is a key  piece of infrastructure that we believe is necessary for the development of the  whole of the transport. It takes so many trucks off the road because you can  get things onto a train. The train becomes efficient. For a business, it is  cost effective. It is about being cost effective.14          | 
  
  
    | 4.31 | 
    Another  important rail link proposed for the Hunter  region is a direct link between Fassifern and Hexham, to the south of Newcastle. Construction  of this link would remove the necessity for traffic from Sydney  and regions to the south, to pass through the suburbs of Newcastle. The estimated cost is $95 million,  and the project would lower transport costs and reduce the environmental and  social impacts of freight shipments into Newcastle.15           | 
  
  
    | 4.32 | 
    The  Hunter Business Council emphasised the benefits to be gained by construction of  this link: 
  …the Fassifern to  Hexham corridor…would take the access to the port [Newcastle] out of the residential areas. It  would take the line through open space that is currently available, and that  could then hook up to the main northern lines and then to the port from there.16          | 
  
  
    | 4.33 | 
    There  is also a proposal to put a rail freight corridor beside the F3 Freeway, to  take the freight movements out of the Newcastle  and Lake Macquarie areas. The line could run on  Electricity Commission land and there are rail formations already in place. In  2002, this project was costed at $80 million.17          | 
  
  
     | 
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    Other NSW Links | 
    
  
    | 4.34 | 
    Professor   Laird called the Committee’s attention to a proposal for an upgrade  to the line from Menangle to Yanderra, the Wentworth Route (See map on  page). This would, he said:
      
      
  …replace 54.3km of track with ‘steam age’ alignment from near  Menangle…to the northern portal of the Aylmerton tunnel…with 36km of track  built to modern engineering standards. This would have a ruling curvature of  1500 metres, albeit with a 1 in 50 grade that could be eased to 1 in 60 by  rejoining the old track near…Yanderra. 
   
        The main benefit…is saving an average of 17 minutes transit  …and modest fuel savings for heavy super freighters. 
         
        The…Wentworth route …would tie in  well with the Maldon Port Kembla Railway, and share about 2km of common  alignment near Wilton…between  the Hume Highway and Truck Road 88. Its reservation is long overdue.18  | 
  
  
    | 4.35 | 
    Professor   Laird also noted that the  Wentworth Route was one of three major deviations mentioned in the 2001 ARTC  Track Audit for the Main South line. The other two are between Goulburn and  Yass, and between Bowning and near Cootamundra. He added: 
      To complete all three deviations would require less  construction than undertaken in track straightening …between Brisbane  and Townsville…19         | 
  
  
     | 
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    Crossing the Toowoomba   Range | 
    
  
    | 4.36 | 
    The greatest obstacle to freight movements into Brisbane  from the south and west is the mountain range between Toowoomba and the coast.  The Committee believes that it is  essential that the problem of passing through, or around, the mountains should  be solved as quickly as possible.   | 
  
  
    | 4.37 | 
    Evidence given in Toowoomba, indicated that one  of the problems was the low axle loading allowed on Queensland Rail’s (QR)  wagons coming through the ranges. With the axle loading limited to 21 tonnes,  exporters are choosing to send their products through in bulk by road instead  of sending light container loads by rail. They then pack their containers to  full capacity at the port. This practice has had the double effect of losing  jobs in Toowoomba and surrounding areas, and of causing congestion on the  Ipswich Motorway as truck numbers increase.20         | 
  
  
    | 4.38 | 
    Queensland Agricultural Merchants (QAM)  suggested that the problem could be overcome, at least in part, if QR were able  to spend about $10 million on new rolling stock made of fibre composite; much  lighter than the old steel wagons currently in use. The company also noted that  since becoming a government owned corporation, QR has been under growing  pressure to make sustained profits: 
      The inter-modal traffic is one where they are expected to  turn a dollar. Consequently their pricing is going up in a catch-up mode. They  have gone from where they were just a state-run rail system to being a  state-owned corporation, and they have been ratcheting up their pricing at a  much faster rate than the cost of road transport. 
       
      So you have businesses turning to road transport. And road  transport is just more responsive, because you can have a truck any time, any  day. You cannot have a train any time, any day.21         | 
  
  
    | 4.39 | 
    QAM also commented that it was not expecting the  line through the ranges to be upgraded to take a greater axle loading: 
      The minister told us in no uncertain terms that there are no  plans for the state government to spend massive amounts of money on the upgrade  of the Toowoomba to Grandchester line.22         | 
  
  
    | 4.40 | 
    The Ipswich City Council said that the NSW  Coordinator-General’s department was looking closely at a connection from the  Purga-Ebenezer area to Bromelton, to allow the facilities in the two areas to  complement one another.23         | 
  
  
    | 4.41 | 
    The Cunningham Rail Link Committee,  through the Mayor of Warwick (and involving six local shires) proposed the  construction of a rail link from Inglewood,  through Warwick, Rathdowney, Bromelton and  Yeerongpilly. It would utilise the existing standard gauge line from Rathdowney  to Brisbane.  This route was proposed as an alternative to the Inglewood, Millmerran and Toowoomba route.24         | 
  
  
    | 4.42 | 
    The proposal argued that this route would be  cheaper (by an estimated $140 million) than going via Inglewood and Toowoomba to Brisbane. It  would have an added advantage because it would not have to compete with public  transport on the rail link. It also claimed that the transport hub at Bromelton  could be utilised to distribute freight to areas surrounding Brisbane,  without the necessity of taking it through the city itself.25         | 
  
  
    | 4.43 | 
    The obvious benefit of this route is that it  would provide an immediate standard gauge line from Melbourne to Brisbane.  Supporters of this group argue that it obviates the need for immediate  upgrading and standardisation of the Toowoomba   Range route.  | 
  
  
    | 4.44 | 
    The Shire of Warwick endorsed this proposal as  the best outcome for the link between Melbourne and Brisbane. The Shire said the proposal has the support of  local authorities from Beaudesert, Boonah, Warwick, Inglewood, Stanthorpe and  Tenterfield.26         | 
  
  
    | 4.45 | 
    As a second stage, the Cunningham Rail Link Committee said that the intention is to add a link  to Charlton (on the outskirts of Toowoomba) from Warwick. The  estimate for upgrading that line was about $60 to $80 million. The other  advantage for this route is that it runs through “…basically freehold grazing  country”.27         | 
  
  
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    Queensland’s  “Missing Links” | 
    
  
    | 4.46 | 
    In an assessment in 2006, ABARE considered that  the key issue in Australia’s  coal export trade was the ability to match the available export infrastructure  to the regional development of mines and their output growth.28         | 
  
  
    | 4.47 | 
    This became a priority matter in the first half  of 2007, when the queues of coal ships began building up off Newcastle and Dalrymple Bay.  By the middle of the year, newspaper reports were suggesting that the rail  network was unable to deliver to the ports the tonnages contracted to overseas  buyers by the coal companies.29         | 
  
  
    | 4.48 | 
    In turn, this problem brought to attention the  claims made to the Committee that  there are two “missing links” in the rail connections to the Queensland coalfields. It was suggested that  construction of a rail line in each of these gaps, would allow coal shipments  to be diverted to other ports to provide for expansion of exports, or if  extensive delays occurred at either the ports or on the rail links.30         | 
  
  
    | 4.49 | 
    In the north the proposal is to construct a link  between the Bowen   Basin coalfields and the  Abbot Point Coal Terminal, near Bowen. At present,  the shipments from the northern Bowen basin fields  must use the Goonyella line to the coal terminals near Mackay.31         | 
  
  
    | 4.50 | 
    The Mackay Area Consultative Committee indicated its support for the project. It  said that the expected saving of $11 a tonne in transport costs over the  alternative 150 km route, is a considerable incentive .  | 
  
  
    | 4.51 | 
    The proposal is to build a new track of about 72  km from Newlands to North Goonyella. The line  would be 60 kg rail on concrete sleepers and have a 26 tonne axle load limit.  The diesel trains to be used initially, would have a coal load capacity of  4,600 tonnes. Electrification of the line would substantially increase that  capacity.32         | 
  
  
    | 4.52 | 
    In June 2007, the Queensland Premier announced  that a $25 million feasibility study on the Goonyella project had been  completed. He said that agreements had been reached with property owners to  acquire the necessary property to allow the project to proceed.33         | 
  
  
    | 4.53 | 
    The project, as now proposed, will build 69 km  of new track and also strengthen the existing track through to Abbot Point,  allowing it to take heavier loads. The 80 tonne wagons used at present could  then be replaced by 104 tonne wagons, providing a substantial increase in  efficiency.34         | 
  
  
    | 4.54 | 
    The Queensland Transport Minister said that  Queensland Rail would fund the project, but not until contracts on user costs  had been finalised with the coal mining companies. He added that the total cost  would be about $1 billion, including electrification, but anticipated earnings  could reach $4 billion a year.35         | 
  
  
    | 4.55 | 
    The announcement indicated that the track would  take about 30 months to build. A concurrent $300 million expansion at Abbot  Point, will double its capacity to 30 million tonnes a year by 2010.36        | 
  
  
    Figure 4.1 Queensland  Coal Mines and Infrastructure 
        | 
    
  
    | 4.56 | 
    The southern “missing link” refers to a proposed  220km narrow gauge link from Wandoan to Moura (via Theodore). This link would  open the way for Surat Basin coal to be exported through Gladstone.37 Another submission suggested the line should go as far as Banana. The same  submission, suggested that completion of a further 20 km link, from Goondiwindi  to North Star in NSW, would complete the rail connection from Melbourne to Gladstone.38        | 
  
  
    | 4.57  | 
    A study prepared by GHD on behalf of the Western  Downs Regional Organisation of Councils, strongly supported the completion of  this link. The report said that if it were constructed “…then the area can be  developed at a much more rapid pace”.39         | 
  
  
    | 4.58  | 
    Other witnesses also supported this project, and  indicated that the idea was supported by every council along the proposed  route. Evidence was given that the boom in demand for coal was a major factor  in the need for this line. Witnesses said that the two main coal mining  companies in the area had “…shown real interest in strong financial  contribution to this project.” The evidence noted also that there were another  six to eight coal companies that would benefit from this line. For example, the  Chinchilla shire said that: 
      We have at least three coalmines in the Chinchilla area with  proponents ready to go, but they just have no way of getting the coal out.40         | 
  
  
    | 4.59  | 
    A number of witnesses from northern NSW were  also in favour of the connection from Queensland down to North Star. They were  inclined to seek the extension of the Queensland  narrow gauge line. However, the Committee  considered that as the national network is standard gauge, it makes more sense  in the long term to have a dual gauge line, offering both narrow and standard  gauge, at little extra cost. The group indicated a gap in that area that needed  to be closed – between Camurra and Boggabilla.41         | 
  
  
    | 4.60  | 
    The Committee believes that the addition of  these links to the rail network would provide a much-needed flexibility to the  system. It would open the possibility of alternate routes being available, if  one part of the network were closed by an accident or natural disaster. It  would also add a useful layer to the security of the network.  | 
  
  
    | 4.61  | 
    The Committee’s  view was supported by the Glen Innes  Section 355 Transport Committee,  which said: 
      The diversification of the rail network is essential.  Diversification in terms of carriers and diversification in terms of options  for destinations ports and routes to port. 
       
  …The current rail network locks export producers into a very  narrow choice of export port if they want to use the rail network to transport  their goods. We believe that diversification of destination ports can only be  brought about by increasing the number of rail options available to the  exporter.42         | 
  
  
    | 4.62  | 
    The RTSA also indicated that there is a  “demonstrable need to expedite Caboolture-Landsborough duplication and  re-alignment and to start planning for other rail deviations and bridges…” on  the Brisbane  –Townsville route. As an example, the RTSA referred to the bridge on the Burnett River near Bundaberg “…which is now  subject to a 15 km/h ‘flat’ speed restriction (i.e. no acceleration or  braking)”.43         | 
  
  
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    Victoria | 
    
  
    | 4.63  | 
    The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry  proposed the upgrading of the Melbourne to Adelaide railway to “…facilitate double  stacking of containers and maximum length trains allowed elsewhere on the  network (1,800 metres)”.44         | 
  
  
    | 4.64  | 
    The Chamber estimated the cost of this project  at $30 million and commented: 
      The current clearance problem represents a significant  restraint on the national rail network. Double stack capability is currently  available from Adelaide  to Perth, Darwin  and Parkes (NSW). The current 1,500 metre maximum train length also limits  operations, on a link which is near service capacity.45         | 
  
  
    | 4.65  | 
    Members of the Committee  reiterate the findings of their earlier inquiry Tracking Australia, insofar as the Dynon exit is critical to a  number of routes out of Melbourne,  as described in Chapter 3 (paragraph 3.78).   | 
  
  
     | 
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    Rail connectivity within Victoria | 
    
  
    | 4.66  | 
    Several witnesses raised the question of a lack  of rail connectivity within Victoria. Their concerns  centred mainly on the failure to complete the standardisation of rail gauges in  the state. This was of special concern to the Latrobe City Council: 
      The city’s rail freight transport with ports and the rest of Australia is  severely impacted as result of State Government’s decision not to standardise  the rail line. This has significant negative consequences for the movement of  bulk and containerised commodities from the region for export. … 
       
      There has been little consideration by state government of  freight impact of passenger transport decisions. There have been a number of  consequences of related development which [have] also impinged on the ability  of the Bairnsdale-Melbourne railway line’s ability to remain competitive. These  include the development of Federation square such that double stacking from Eastern Victoria is not available and the decision not to  invest in rail gauge standardisation at the time of fast-rail development. 
       
      There is a new opportunity … with the proposed [triplication]  of the Dandenong-Caulfield line. We contend that this opportunity should be  grasped as a low cost no regrets approach.46         | 
  
  
    | 4.67  | 
    The Alliance of Councils for Rail Freight  Development, which represents 24 councils in Victoria  and southern NSW, said that it had been formed because of a growing feeling of  frustration with the lack of rail connectivity in Victoria.47         | 
  
  
    | 4.68  | 
    Some years ago, the Victorian Government  expressed its intention to standardise the Victorian rail network. That  intention seems to have been abandoned in favour of extending the fast train  passenger services. | 
  
  
    | 4.69  | 
    Representatives from several areas of Victoria  gave evidence to the Committee about their isolation from the main Australian  standard gauge network.   | 
  
  
    | 4.70  | 
    The Sunraysia Mallee Economic Development Board  indicated that connecting Mildura to the national standard gauge line would  provide a number of benefits. At present, the Board said: 
  …all east-west trains, presently double stacked, are broken  down at Dry Creek, SA and reconfigured to progress to Melbourne. The estimate  is that 32 hours are lost in the process. 
   
      If the Mildura region is connected to the transcontinental,  double stacking from Perth/Darwin/Melbourne via Mildura may prove to be  economically and commercially practical, and indeed the preferred route. 
       
      The proposed route to the transcontinental is a relatively  simple connection in the order of 200km, which would cost $220 to $250 million.48         | 
  
  
    | 4.71  | 
    The Mildura Council also suggested that a rail  connection via Mildura could represent an alternative North-South route, if  there are any interruptions on the regular Melbourne to Brisbane  route.49 Completion of the rail loop around Mildura from Thurla to Yelta, and a rail  spur to the Mildura   Airport, would help to  improve Thurla’s connectivity to the wider network.          | 
  
  
    | 4.72  | 
    In May 2006, the Victorian Government committed  $53 million to upgrading the Mildura line for freight purposes.50 On 28 May 2007,  the Government announced that work on this project will commence in September  2007. The upgrade will allow freight trains to run at 80 km an hour and  substantially reduce transit times.51        | 
  
  
    | 4.73  | 
    The Gippsland region is also disconnected from  the national standard gauge system. The City of Casey noted: 
      There are no Standard Gauge rail connections east of the  Melbourne Terminus. This limits the opportunity to link Gippsland, south  Gippsland or the Port   of Hastings directly by  rail to the National Rail Network. 
       
      Without a Standard Gauge connection, rail freight movements  cannot compete with road freight due to the costs associated with double  handling and time impacts. 
       
      Once a container is loaded onto a truck, it is far easier to  complete the journey by road rather than transfer to rail and potentially  transfer again between a Broad Gauge line and Standard Gauge  line, with a further transfer to road for the final destination.52         | 
  
  
    | 4.74  | 
    The City commented that an upgrade is needed and  that would give an opportunity to provide the standard gauge link: 
      Upgrading of the line is required as a matter of urgency. If  a third track was provided, the opportunity to include a double gauge  configuration should be explored as this would provide Standard Gauge rail  freight links to the Dandenong/Hallam Industrial areas.  
       
      It also maintains the opportunity to extend those links in  the future along the Gippsland, south Gippsland and even the potential Port of Hastings routes.53         | 
  
  
    | 4.75  | 
    The City of Casey has put the view that if a connection  to the Port of Hastings is ever to be built,  acquisition of the land for the rail corridor should be undertaken soon. On the  basis of their argument, land acquisition is becoming more and more difficult  along that route and could become economically impractical if left too long: 
      Any study into future freight connections to the Port of Hastings should investigate the options  for a rail connection from Dandenong to Hastings. Provision for such a  connection generally along the Western Port Highway corridor is becoming  increasing[ly] remote as development continues to constrain an alignment that  might minimise acquisition of “urban” land.54         | 
  
  
    | 4.76  | 
    While the Committee  accepts the generality of this argument, and the prudent necessity of reserving  rail routes, it does not see this as a high priority at present because of the  huge investment in the Melbourne  port infrastructure.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Western Australia | 
    
  
    The South and South West | 
    
  
    | 4.77  | 
    The freight task in the south and south west of  WA is growing rapidly as mineral and timber developments are brought into  production.  | 
  
  
    | 4.78  | 
    In the Bunbury area, there is a narrow gauge  rail connection that carries alumina and also has a passenger service. The  volume of freight is already large enough to conflict with the passenger  schedule. As the volume of freight is growing, the South West Development  Commission suggests that there is a need to examine the option of a dual gauge  line from Brunswick  to the port, about 27 km.55         | 
  
  
    | 4.79  | 
    WestNet Rail commented that this duplication  “…may be required at some point in the future but certainly not in the short to  medium term”. The company also said that it consults regularly with Alcoa and  Worsley (the companies responsible for almost 90 per cent of the region’s  freight) and has planned to install additional crossing loops where they are  required to support the two companies in their expansion plans.56         | 
  
  
    | 4.80  | 
    There is a rail line in the south west, some of  it nominally operative, but presently inactive. In its absence, the freight is  limited to road haulage; although there have been discussions between WA  Plantation Resources (WAPR), the railway company and the State Government,  about re-establishing rail operations.57         | 
  
  
    | 4.81  | 
    WA Plantation Resources has attempted to assist  the transfer back to rail by building a processing plant in Bunbury, which  increases the potential freight volume from 300,000 tonnes to 700,000 tonnes –  at the latter level, the haulage rate is competitive with road.58         | 
  
  
    | 4.82  | 
    Overall, WA Plantation Resources said, “…rail  infrastructure at the moment is limited. There are only two or three major  lines, and certainly they do not service a significant part of the south-west  region”.59         | 
  
  
    | 4.83  | 
    The Griffin Coal Company said that it had  particular problems with gaining access to rail transport. Although the mine  has both loading facilities and a rail line, the railway company had not been  able to provide coal trucks to take the mine’s output. A bottom dump system and  a stack-out system are also needed.60 Recent advice from the company indicated that some coal wagons had been  obtained from Queensland  but the problem is not yet completely solved.         | 
  
  
    | 4.84  | 
    The alternative outlet for Griffin Coal is to  send its coal to Kwinana. The problem with that option, the company said, was  that the railway company was quoting $11.50 a tonne to move the coal, while Griffin’s competitors in  the Hunter Valley are paying less than $4 a tonne.61         | 
  
  
    | 4.85  | 
    In the first quarter of 2006, the mine was  producing at the rate of 3.1 million tonnes a year and had just installed  capacity for 5.5 million tonnes, involving an outlay of $50 million.62         | 
  
  
    | 4.86  | 
     The City of Bunbury referred to a section of the wheat  belt disconnected from the rail system in the late 1980s; it includes the area  around Collie, Narrogin, Wagin and Konjunup. The City said that “…There used to  be three railway lines …When they rationalised, they rationalised all three.  That has disconnected that whole wheat market from Bunbury port, yet Bunbury…is  a prime wheat port.”  | 
  
  
    | 4.87  | 
    The City estimated that the line could be  re-established through Merredin for about $50 -70 million. The suggestion was  that a dual gauge connection would provide a direct link to the national  standard gauge line.63         | 
  
  
    | 4.88  | 
    The area around Albany has an expanding timber industry. The  industry expects to more than double its output of woodchips within ten years.  About half of this will move by rail and the rest by road.64         | 
  
  
    | 4.89 | 
    Timber 2020 said that rail connections to the  plantations are inadequate: 
      The rail line that we have was originally built for  passengers going down from Perth  but essentially round the grain operation. It does not cover vast areas which  are now plantation, so there is no way that that stuff can go on rail unless it  is brought to a central area and checked…So unless the rail set-up is increased  dramatically, at huge cost, I think it is very unlikely that we are going to  persuade more people than there are at the moment to go on rail.65         | 
  
  
    | 4.90  | 
    The Timber Industry Road Evaluation Strategy  Group (TIRES) added that: 
      The current rail line basically runs north-south; the timber  industry goes east-west from the port, especially on the coastal strip. Even if  they were to put a couple of spur lines in the east-west to meet up with that  line, all they would be doing is duplicating state roads. 
       
      The local road network would still suffer under all the  freight of the product from the farm to the rail line. The issue for local  government is still there no matter what rail does.66         | 
  
  
    | 4.91  | 
    The main rail issues in the area around  Esperance, concern the line to Kalgoorlie.  The Shire of Esperance told the Committee  that it is essential that the line to Kalgoorlie  be designated an AusLink corridor.67         | 
  
  
    | 4.92  | 
    The Shire explained that this line is standard  gauge and links into the national standard gauge line. The Shire claimed that  if it were on the east coast, it would be an AusLink corridor: 
      The rail line starts at Leonora, picks up all of the products  in that north-eastern mineralised area of the state – a whole range of products  – and brings them down and exports them through this port, and it takes fuel  back up into that region. So we are saying that corridor must have  significance. 
       
      Our belief is that, if it is not within that corridor laid  down by federal parliament, we will have a huge amount of problems in ever  attracting federal funding to the significant investments that might be needed  for the future.68         | 
  
  
    | 4.93  | 
    In discussing the ownership of the line, the  Shire said: 
      We were quite frustrated and disappointed when the former  Western Australian government sold the rail track and the rolling stock to the  same company… We believe that the Australian Rail Track Corporation should have  controlled that line from top to bottom. It was common sense… 
       
      Then I think we would be part of a standard model right  across Australia  and it would allow us to see more competitive rates on those lines, because you  have got a rail and track corporation controlling it…69         | 
  
  
    | 4.94  | 
    The City of Kalgoorlie-Boulder, referring to the line  south to Esperance, said that it is in need of some improvement: 
      My understanding is that the geometry of the track is not  ideal and in fact limits the speed and the safe travel of the trains using that  line. That is obviously going to slow the trip down and lessens the amount of  rolling stock you can have on the line.70         | 
  
  
    | 4.95  | 
    Co-operative Bulk Handling Ltd (CBH), however,  said that, for the grain industry: 
      It is hard to see any real opportunity to increase the use of  rail into the Esperance port zone for two reasons: firstly, the locations of  the current storages and, secondly, the problems that we have in the port  itself in…the discharge operation, which is quite inefficient at the moment.  Most of this port zone is serviced by road.71         | 
  
  
    | 4.96  | 
    Portman Ltd is exporting almost 8 million tonnes  of iron ore a year from its mine at Koolyanobbing. The mine will have a future  capacity of between 10 and15 million tonnes a year. Portman said, however, that  the rail line would have to be significantly upgraded to handle a greater  tonnage than the present load. The company estimated that the required upgrade  between Kalgoorlie-Boulder and Esperance would cost about $70 million.72         | 
  
  
    | 4.97  | 
    The ore is railed via Kalgoorlie-Boulder to  Esperance. Portman and WestRail said that two new passing loops had been added  to the line between Kalgoorlie-Boulder and Esperance and eight existing loops  had been extended. The loops could now handle 126 car trains – the limits  previously were between 84 and 100 cars. Those improvements cost Portman $16  million and the company has also invested $45 million on rolling stock in  recent years.73         | 
  
  
    | 4.98  | 
    Portman said that the haulage of 580 km to  Esperance is one of the longest haulage operations for bulk goods anywhere. The  company’s problem is that it costs them about $10 a tonne, compared to $2 or $3  a tonne for haulage in the Pilbara. Another problem is the rail line itself: 
      The rail is on an old alignment. I think it is referred to  sometimes as being a contour type line, …it meanders through the contours of  the countryside and was suitable for slow-speed operation of trains of 50, 60  or 100 years ago. 
       
  …sharp radius corners, limited formation preparation, not  suitable for high-speed, heavy operations…Currently the speed limitation is 50  kilometres an hour for loaded trains. The standard that applies elsewhere, and  indeed on the Koolyanobbing-Kalgoorlie section, is 80 kilometres an hour, so we  are suffering a significant productivity issue with significant speed  restrictions. 
   
      In addition to that, it is susceptible to flooding and …to  heat buckling …in summertime, when additional speed restrictions could be  imposed because of the integrity of the track and its capacity to handle  temperature variations. So it is a relatively tenuous link.74         | 
  
  
    | 4.99  | 
    The region has additional prospects, with the  proposed development of another iron ore (hematite) deposit 40 km south west of  Wiluna by Golden West Resources. The area is 700 km from the proposed port of Oakagee, near Geraldton, and 900 km from  Esperance. Tests so far have proved reserves of 50 million tonnes, and this is  expected to reach 100 million by the end of 2007. Ultimately, the company  expects to have 250 million tonnes available for export at 10 million tonnes a  year. The initial stage will be 1 million tonnes a year for three years, by  road and rail to Esperance.75         | 
  
  
    | 4.100  | 
    Based on prices in mid-2007, the deposit would  be worth $A77 a tonne, FOB. The company expects the price to decline after  2008, and in three years it could be $A60-65 a tonne. Transport costs via  Esperance have been estimated at $25 a tonne, mining costs at $5 to $8 a tonne,  and processing $3 a tonne. The company is considering a purpose-built,  open-access, rail line into Oakagee, post 2010 – it expects that this would  lower transport costs to $19 a tonne.76         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Mid West Region | 
    
  
    | 4.101  | 
    The Hon. Murray Criddle, said that the rail  network in this region had been used for only about two million tonnes a year –  mainly wheat and mineral sands. He added that: 
      Only minimal expenditure has been undertaken on the rail  network. Line closure, speed restrictions and reducing train sizes have been  used to keep the rail operational for current clients.77         | 
  
  
    | 4.102  | 
    He said there is now a need to move about 4  million tonnes a year. This has caused some road congestion because the rail  lines, some dating from the 1920s, are unable to cope and the freight moves to  road transport. To overcome this problem he proposed an upgrade in the rail  line from Geraldton to Mullewa and Perenjori, to about  
      30 tonnes axle loading, and the addition of new passing lanes. He estimated the  total cost at $60 million.78         | 
  
  
    | 4.103  | 
    The Mid West Development Commission commented  that the sub-standard rail connections are already forcing some iron ore  exporters to use road transport: 
      Mt Gibson Iron is exporting iron ore from Geraldton at a rate  of approximately 2.4 mtpa …but is being forced to supplement rail freight with  road freight due to the inadequate rail system that was constructed in the  1920s/30s to haul significantly less quantities of grain. 
       
      Midwest Corporation…have elected to use road instead of rail  for a number of reasons. They would have to use the same rail network as Mt Gibson. 
       
      It is apparent that the region’s road and rail network will  be incapable of delivering proposed iron ore tonnages to the port. 
       
      Accordingly, at least 2 major iron ore projects are planning  to build slurry pipelines to transport iron ore concentrate to the port rather  than use the ageing and inadequate rail network.79         | 
  
  
    | 4.104  | 
    The new port at Oakagee will require a standard  gauge rail connection to the iron ore deposits in the Weld Range, about 400km  north east of Geraldton. The potential is for 60 to 80 million tonnes to be  exported by 2012. An upgrade of the line to the south east will also be needed  and eventually converted to standard gauge.80         | 
  
  
    | 4.105  | 
    If the plans of Golden West Resources, mentioned  above, proceed as intended, the company will send 10 million tonnes of iron ore  a year out through Oakagee, from about 2010.81         | 
  
  
    | 4.106  | 
    Like projects in southern WA, the iron ore  projects will have problems obtaining rolling stock. The evidence indicated  that the current exporter waited 16 months to get the wagons needed to move its  cargo. It had, in the end, used 35 year old rolling stock, which did not fit  into the train unloaders.82         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    South Australia | 
    
  
    Green Triangle Region | 
    
  
    | 4.107  | 
    The Green Triangle Region includes the south  east of South Australia  and the Western District and Wimmera in Victoria.  The local councils in the region are concerned that it is isolated from the  main standard gauge line.83         | 
  
  
    | 4.108  | 
    When standardisation of the Adelaide to Melbourne line  was completed in 1995, it effectively isolated the broad gauge lines in south  eastern South Australia  and parts of western Victoria.  The result was that freight movements on those lines ceased.84         | 
  
  
    | 4.109  | 
    The region’s production is already export  oriented and agricultural and forestry products, manufactured goods and  minerals are shipped through Portland.  The problem is that the area is expecting rapid growth in exports of timber  products and mineral sands.  Estimates  indicate that this will involve an additional 3 million tonnes of woodchips and  350,000 tonnes of mineral sands a year. The lack of a rail connection will  consign those shipments to the roads.85         | 
  
  
    | 4.110  | 
    The Glenelg Council made its submission on  behalf of local government bodies on both sides of the South Australia/Victoria  border. The main proposal was that the rail line between Mt Gambier and Heywood should be re-opened and converted to standard  gauge. The Council said that not only would this open the way for the region’s  exports to reach Portland  by rail, but, with the Heywood-Wolseley standard gauge rail link  re-established, additional capacity would be available for the Adelaide to Melbourne rail  link.86         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Tasmania | 
    
  
    | 4.111  | 
    In May 2005 the Tasmanian Government made its  submission to this inquiry. That submission was critical of the lack of funding  applied to rail infrastructure in Tasmania.  It drew a comparison with the attention and funding given to roads and to rail  infrastructure in the mainland states.87         | 
  
  
    | 4.112  | 
    Since then, the Australian Government has  reached an agreement with the Tasmanian Government and Pacific National and has  allocated $78 million towards maintaining and upgrading the Tasmanian rail  network.88         | 
  
  
    | 4.113  | 
    In announcing the agreement, the Minister said: 
      The purpose of the rail rescue passage is to undertake a  programme of remedial works on the AusLink elements of the Tasmanian rail  system, between Hobart, Launceston and Burnie. These  works are necessary to ensure speed restrictions and other track infrastructure  impediments to reliable performance are addressed over the 10 year period of  the works programme.89         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Northern Territory | 
    
  
    | 4.114  | 
    The main rail issue in the Northern Territory, outside the Darwin  port precincts, is the Adelaide  to Darwin  rail line. When asked about the seeming lack of traffic growth on that line,  the Darwin Port Corporation said: 
      The Adelaide  to Darwin  railway has always been a long-term vision – it has been a 50-year project. To  anticipate that all of a sudden, from day one on, you would have a significant  jump in trade would be false, I think. 
      Certainly Port Corporation personnel, my colleagues here and  other government representatives, in association with shippers and so on, are  working on opportunities …to identify trade opportunities for the railway. It  is not anticipated that it will happen on day one; it is a long-term vision.90         | 
  
  
    | 4.115  | 
    The Darwin Port Corporation said that the  introduction of iron ore shipments would require the addition of passing loops  on the Adelaide  to Darwin  line. That, the Northern Territory Department of Planning and Infrastructure  said, would be up to the rail owner.91 
           | 
  
  
    
      
        CASE STUDY 
            The Benefits  of Realignment 
             
          One example of a realignment that would provide substantial improvement  in transit time, and savings on operational costs, is the rail line from Hexham  to Stroud Road in NSW. 
           
          The present track is 97 km long and the alignment forces trains to go  through 18.5 complete circles of curvature. For almost half of the distance,  the curvature is 810 metres or less. 
           
          An alternative route has been proposed, to run through the Karuah Valley.  This route would be 67 km long, with a ruling gradient of 1:80 and, for most of  its length, a curvature of 2,200 metres and no tunnels. Following this route  would take the trains through less than one circle of curvature. The estimated  cost of this re-alignment (in 2004) was $230 million. 
           
          A computer simulation applied to this project indicated that using the  new alignment for a 1,500 metre train, hauling 3,900 tonnes, would generate  savings of $960 a train to the train operator, and $240 a train on the variable  costs of the track owners. 
           
          The results of the simulation showed a reduction in transit time from  82 to 42 minutes, fuel usage reduced from 1,582 litres to 952 litres and a  dramatic reduction in brake work from 1,335 kWh to 207 kWh. All of these  results would contribute to a reduction in the environmental impact of train  services in the area. 
           
          Measured over a year, using current freight volumes, the savings would  total $2.3 million for train owners and about $800,000 for the track owners. It  was also calculated that for each tonne of intercity freight diverted to rail,  with road pickup and delivery, external costs would be reduced by $20. 
           
          The simulation estimated that rail would win an extra 0.23 million  tonnes a year – reducing external costs by $4.6 million a year. On this basis,  total benefits from the re-alignment would be $7.7 million a year. | 
       
     
      Source: Alex Stoney, How benefits could flow from one section of  re- alignment, Track and Signal, April,  May, June 2006, p.34 and The Karuah River  Railway, Second Edition, 16   July 2004, p.2.  | 
    
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Regional Grain Lines | 
    
  
    | 4.116  | 
    One problem repeatedly brought to the Committee’s attention during the inquiry, was the  poor condition of the regional rail lines servicing the shipment of grain for  export. This is a problem in several states.  | 
  
  
    | 4.117 | 
    The Australian Wheat Board (AWB) said that one  of the main problems is that the capacity of the network has not kept pace with  the increase in grain shipments: 
      Most of the present regional road and rail network  infrastructure has been based on the production levels of some 30 or 40 years  ago, or roughly half the current required capacity. Over this period there has  been minimal capital investment in components of the network to bring it up to  modern standards. 
  …the rail network is deteriorating rapidly and has become a  key limiting factor for the grain export industry to meet demand in a timely  manner, or to be able to respond to marketing opportunities as they occur.92         | 
  
  
    | 4.118 | 
    The AWB added that much of the rail network had  been built 100 years ago. Its shortcomings, the Board said, could be seen by a  comparison with the North American rail networks: 
      As a comparison guide, North American rail networks carry up  to 100 tonnes of wheat in a wagon. In contrast, the average Australian net wagon  load is 55 tonnes and can be as low as 35 net tonnes.93         | 
  
  
    | 4.119 | 
    In recent years the process of privatisation has  completely changed the dynamics of regional railways. The Railway Technical  Society of Australasia (RTSA) said that for the regional grain lines to  survive, a new method of administration is needed: 
  …the process of change that has happened over the last 10 to  15 years on Australian railways has, to a large extent, sorted out the  interstate or national level operations but there has been no complementary  process of change in the branch lines. They have been left out to some extent.94         | 
  
  
    | 4.120 | 
    The Australasian Railway Association said that  greater co-operation is the only way that the supply chain can achieve  sustainability: 
      The supply chain has changed dramatically and relationships  within the chain have changed even more. The only way the chain as a whole will  become sustainable in the long term is through policy and regulatory change to  encourage participants to work more co-operatively together. 
       
      If this does not occur, each participant can only improve  their individual activity within the chain at the margin… 
       
      By closing small inefficient depots, some branch lines, and  using a planned co-ordinated road/rail transport system, the limited government  and industry funds would be focussed on long term infrastructure improvements  rather than being spread across investments that give short term, but  unsustainable long term, benefits.95         | 
  
  
    | 4.121 | 
    CBH in WA, explained that one of the problems is  the comparative cost of road and rail infrastructure: 
      We have …seen because of the increase in commercial  pressures, an uncoordinated approach to funding for infrastructure type  investment. We had some issues in relation to road versus rail infrastructure  costs. 
       
      For example, slip roads into the site…are in the order of  $600,000, whilst rail related loading infrastructure at the moment runs to  about $4 million. So economically, it would make a lot more sense for CBH to  invest in road related infrastructure rather than rail, although, as a company,  we are very strong supporters of rail. Rail siding construction and maintenance  costs are also very, very high.96         | 
  
  
    | 4.122 | 
    The RTSA said that it believes that “…rail is  not living up to the potential that it can offer producers, consumers and  particularly the welfare of regional communities”. It said that the problem is  that: 
      Historical patterns  and demand have shifted and now powerful market forces in grain logistics are  driving efficiency and change in regional transport. Old frameworks for rail  are ill equipped to effectively integrate rail to road and storage systems,  either for the grains industry or for wider sustainable regional transport.  
       
      These frameworks  were established for a bygone era in which state based centrally planned rail  agencies were aligned with state based road authorities, grain handlers, port  authorities and export marketers. 
       
      Whilst handling  authorities are now deregulated and new entrants are appearing in upcountry  storage, the price signals through the expected silo returns are sending clear  signals to farmers. Although enterprise level productivity in modern silos is  clear, it is also evident that general productivity in regional rail has not  increased to the same extent as road transport.97         | 
  
  
    | 4.123 | 
    The Riverina Eastern Regional Organisation of Councils  (REROC), representing 12 local government organisations in the eastern  Riverina, said that the situation with the network of grain lines was  disturbing its members: 
      Our members are extremely concerned that rail is being  removed from the transport solution for grain. Recent policies implemented by  the State Government have resulted in a series of recommendations to close  branch lines in rural areas… 
       
      The closure of the branch lines has increased the number and  frequency of truck movements on regional roads as this is now the only way in  which farmers are able to deliver their grain to the regional receival points.  
       
      Not only has this increased the cost of production for  farmers it has also negatively impacted on local councils who are now faced  with repairing the damage that will result from the increased usage of regional  roads by heavily laden grain trucks.98         | 
  
  
    | 4.124 | 
    The RTSA suggested that Australia should consider the approach successfully applied in North   America: 
      The key observation arising from the North American  experience is that regional rail became viable after deregulation there because  it was put onto a regional basis. Basically, the large operators wanted to  divest themselves of the responsibility and regional operators took up that  responsibility. 
       
      We are suggesting that we move towards that process of  change. The problem …is that we do not have the institutional capacity in  regional Australia.  I accept that it varies from place to place, but the institutional capacity to  do that does not exist.99         | 
  
  
    | 4.125 | 
    Professor   Gray, appearing with the RTSA,  suggested that regional areas be encouraged to organise and operate local lines  themselves. He suggested that this could be encouraged by the Australian  Government providing funding to support suitable regional groups; a similar  arrangement to the eleven NSW regional transport co-ordinators.100         | 
  
  
    | 4.126 | 
    The RTSA agreed with this approach and said: 
  … The state officials ask us: ‘What are the barriers to this  happening at the moment? Why doesn’t this happen at the moment?’ The reason is  that we need the states or the federal government to take on a facilitation  role to make it happen.  
   
      We need the legislative framework to make sure the safety  regulations are in place, we need to segment this particular market away from  the main line market and we need to help facilitate the entrepreneurial level  and local control and local ownership of these short lines.101         | 
  
  
    | 4.127 | 
    Toll  Holdings indicated that discussions were under way with other parties in the  grain supply chain – with the idea of applying the Hunter Valley Coal Chain  model to the task of moving the grain harvest: 
      We are now trying to take that same  approach to the grain supply chain in New    South Wales where you have all the same dynamics. You  have different parties owning the mines, that is, the silos, different parties  owning the trains, different parties owning the rail infrastructure and  different parties owning the ports. They all run into each other and the system  is terribly inefficient, let alone the quality of the branch line infrastructure.  
       
      We are now talking to a number of the  other parties in the grain supply chain in New South Wales about replicating what we  did in the Hunter   Valley in the grain  supply chain. We think there are huge benefits to be gained there. It really  does require an entirely different approach to the way government policy  operates and the way government regulates assets. At the moment the way assets  are regulated it is very difficult for parties in a supply chain to come  together in a room and talk about operating seamlessly together.102          | 
  
  
    | 4.128 | 
    South    Australia has a similar problem with its grain lines.  The Eyre Peninsula, for example, supplies one  third of the state’s grain and the industry employs about one third of the  region’s workforce. The problem lies in the rail network needed to get the  grain to the ports.103         | 
  
  
    | 4.129 | 
    The Eyre Peninsula Local Government Association  said that the rail network is a vital link in the delivery of the grain harvest  to Port Lincoln and Ceduna. Unfortunately, that network is “…in a poor state of  repair due to the previous owner’s maintenance policy”.104         | 
  
  
    | 4.130 | 
    The Association listed a number of factors that  are restricting the efficiency of the network: 
      - low  track speeds and axle loadings;
 
      - poor  out-load rates at strategic inland silos;
 
      - low  wagon capacity;
 
      - multiple  discharge mechanisms on rolling stock;
 
      - limited  track space and low discharge rates at Port Lincoln;
 
      - summer  heat restrictions during harvest; and
 
      - slow  turn-around times.105
          | 
  
  
    | 4.131 | 
    In Western    Australia, some regions found that privatisation of  the grain lines had quickly resulted in closure of lines, which effectively  moved large quantities of grain to road transport. One example of this was in  the area around Esperance, and the President of the Shire of Esperance said: 
      My understanding of the history in Western Australia, and  that is particularly across the narrow-gauge lines that run around the wheat  belt areas of the state, is that the company that took it over as a component –  or having connections to the company with the rolling stock – very quickly  rationalised those lines; and suddenly we saw all the grain movements et cetera  going onto roads and not onto rail. I think that is a bit of a sad scene.106         | 
  
  
    | 4.132 | 
    The Shire continued that this process was  affecting the traffic on the Kalgoorlie  to Esperance line: 
  …we are caught up in that, because this line, a  standard-gauge line, is drawn into that – to the point where grain is not going  onto rail, although this year I noticed there were some rail wagons bringing  grain down from Salmon Gums and Grass Patch. That could all travel on rail, and  over the last two years 99 per cent of it – perhaps all of it – came down on  road. So we are not getting utilisation of rail.107         | 
  
  
    | 4.133 | 
    CBH is a grower-owned co-operative and the  monopoly grain handling company for Western    Australia. The company, in its evidence, commented  that the Hunter Valley Coal Chain model would not be appropriate for the WA  grain industry. CBH said: 
      One of the things that was obvious to me …is that all the  members of that team had skin on the table. Nationally in the grain industry,  you have a disconnection between operational interface …and the financial  accountability… 
       
  …AWB [does] not own any storage and handling infrastructure  in this state. They control the funds flow from the export grain that comes in.  They pay the bills, if you like….They are in a significant position to reduce  costs at any cost, because they are rewarded for it, which has a detrimental  impact on the supply chain in the long term. 
   
      They are still the owners of that grain, once it is delivered  to the pool. So, if you were to take the Hunter  valley model, you would include AWB at the table, yet they have no  infrastructure at risk and they are rewarded for pushing costs out of the  supply chain at any cost. It is not a model that would work with AWB at the table.108         | 
  
  
    | 4.134 | 
    CBH also said that there is an urgent need to  address the problem of the WA grain lines: 
  …there are vast sections of the line, the narrow-gauge  network in particular at the moment, that are serving the grain industry that  are not viable, even by conservative commercial benchmarks, so something needs  to occur.109         | 
  
  
    | 4.135 | 
    A recent newspaper report highlighted the  problem that can arise for the grain industry when the poor transport  infrastructure has to cope with a bumper crop – and compete with booming  mineral shipments. The article, noting ABARE’s prediction of a 129 per cent  surge in wheat production, said: 
      Australia  may well be awash with grain in the new year, but a dispute between the grain  companies and the rail operator, combined with the parlous state of the rural  rail network, could limit the capacity of farmers to cash in on the drought’s  end.110         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    The North American Short-Line Model | 
    
  
    | 4.136 | 
    The Committee  took advantage of the visit to Australia  of a Canadian expert on regional railways – Mr Ed Zsombor, Director of Rail Services in Saskatchewan. Mr Zsombor  explained some of the differences between the Australian treatment of regional  grain lines and the Canadian equivalent, the system of branch lines (also known  as short-lines) used to move the wheat harvest.  | 
  
  
    | 4.137 | 
    He commented that Canada has only one rail gauge. It  does not have Australia’s  difficulty of trying to mesh different gauges into a coherent system. Canada also has  a government-owned, dedicated fleet of wagons for the grain shipments: 
      In the late seventies and eighties, the federal government  purchased 12,000 100 ton hopper cars, 263,000 pounds gross. …So in the  transportation of grain there is no car or ownership cost built into the  freight rate because they were provided by government. …It is a fleet dedicated  to grain.111         | 
  
  
    | 4.138 | 
    Mr   Zsombor explained that the  Saskatchewan Government had upgraded its 1,000 cars to 286,000 pounds gross –  to haul 110 short tons of grain per car.112         | 
  
  
    | 4.139 | 
    The grain is moved by two private companies,  Canadian Pacific and Canadian National. The government establishes a revenue  cap for export grain, reviewed each year, and the two companies cannot exceed  it. There is an established allocation that splits the revenue almost equally  between them. Any excess revenue is paid back to the government and goes into  an agricultural research fund.113         | 
  
  
  
    | 4.140 | 
    There is a legal process for abandoning or  dismantling rail lines. It must first be advertised for a commercial deal. If  none eventuates, the line must be offered to the province and the local  governments at net salvage value.114         | 
  
  
    | 4.141 | 
    Mr   Zsombor said that from 1979 to  1990, the federal government spent about $1 billion dollars upgrading more than  half the branch lines in western Canada. The aim was to restore  them, over a period of ten years, to a capacity to allow trains to travel at 30  miles per hour, minimum, all year round, and to be able to pull 100 ton cars.115         | 
  
  
    | 4.142 | 
    He said that he believed that decisions on the  abandonment or continuation of a line should be made by the people involved: 
  …when it comes to branch lines, the decision whether that  line should stay or go should be at the lowest level possible and should be  made by the local governments and producers and shippers. And the whole idea,  like any railway,…is that you use it or you lose it. The best place to make  that decision is at the local level, because they are the ones that are going  to decide whether they are going to support using it. 
   
      So we believe those decisions are best made at the lowest  level possible, which is generally in the region or locally. It is not made by  the province; it is not made by the federal government. So that approach is  maybe a little different.116         | 
  
  
    | 4.143 | 
    Mr   Zsombor outlined a scheme used in Canada to give  local communities the opportunity to keep a line open. Saskatchewan will give local groups $25,000  to do a business plan or a feasibility study. There is then a second plan that  can be accessed if the group meets three criteria: a viable business plan for  10 years after the purchase; local investment of a minimum of eight per cent;  and demonstrable local support: 
      So if you have those three things we will take a 15-year  loan, interest free, for the purchaser and, knowing it is a new business, we  let them have three years of no payments if they wish and 12 equal higher  payments rather than 15 lower payments, and that is just to get them started.117         | 
  
  
    | 4.144 | 
    The RTSA added that, in practice, there is no  risk: 
      One of the advantages is that it is at a net salvage value,  which basically means that there is no risk; it is the steel on the rails, and  if the venture does not succeed they can still get the value from the scrap  metal. It is really no risk to the local entrepreneurs. 
      Mr Zsombor,  however, noted that: “The loan is only for the land and the track. They have to  arrange to buy their own locomotive power.”118        | 
  
  
    | 4.145 | 
    Commenting on the situation in Australia, Mr Zsombor  said: 
  …I have seen tracks that you could be running heavier loads  on – I would certainly approve them – but they are underloading the cars, which  makes them very unproductive and inefficient. I think that is because the  standards are set for main lines, where you have got dangerous goods and you  have got passengers. They are very high standards, and you do not need that on  a short line or a branch line. If you had two standards or a different approach  for the branch lines I think that would be really worthwhile; that would make  it a lot easier to start up and to operate.119         | 
  
  
    | 4.146 | 
    Later Mr Zsombor  commented again on the loading of the grain wagons: “I would have no problem  loading the tractor that I looked at to 100 tonnes, but they were underloading  them to 40 tonnes or 50 tonnes. I could not believe that.”120         | 
  
  
    | 4.147 | 
    The concepts explained by Mr Zsombor  received some support from the members of an RTSA Study Tour of the NSW Branch  Lines in March 2006. In his comments on the tour, Mr Ian Gray said: 
      Even in the UK,  where local government has been relatively strong, the central government has  chosen to maintain rail services at the local level by sponsoring partnerships  among local organisations – the “Community Rail” movement.  
       
      The development of Catchment Management Authorities, with  planning powers and substantial budgets, has shown how planning sustainable  development can be focused at the regional level. It should be examined as a  model for establishing an institutional basis for sustainable transport, one in  which people directly affected and aware of business opportunities can  participate.121         | 
  
  
    | 4.148 | 
    Mr Graeme Priddle, on the question of whether short-line operations based on the rail services in North America could be successful in Australia, added: 
      Yes. Local entrepreneur owns the branch line(s). He is  responsible for capital (with federal govt grants) and agreed (beforehand)  maintenance.
           
           
          Hook and pull operators come from outside. Wagons come from outside. …Main  line/ports responsibility of others, BUT everyone talking to every other party.122         | 
  
  
    | 4.149 | 
    Professor   Phillip Laird,  also a member of the Study Tour, suggested that: 
      In the short term there is a good case for rehabilitation of  branch lines. The alternative is to see more and more freight move by B-doubles  on lightly constructed roads.
       
       
      The  fact that lines are no longer vertically integrated means that government may  need to work harder to seek contributions from beneficiaries as well as provide  funds to facilitate upgrades that will enhance Australia’s export potential.123          | 
  
  
    | 4.150 | 
    Professor   Laird concluded: 
      The main reason given for the closure of rural branch lines  servicing the grain industry is that their cost to Government and the tax payer  outweighs the benefit to the community of keeping the lines open.  
       
      Grain transportation via heavy vehicles, including B-double  trucks, and the road network is thought to be appreciably cheaper and more  efficient. However, estimates of cost reduction when the need for rail  infrastructure maintenance is removed often fail to take into account excessive  costs that are simply transferred onto those responsible for maintaining the  local road network, and, the wider community. 
       
  …Unless all costs and factors are fully considered, the  closure of rural branch lines can only be a step backwards in the current  necessary search for sustainable transport options.124         | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Increasing Line Capacity | 
    
  
    | 4.151 | 
    The Committee  considers that the users of the Hunter Valley Coal Chain have demonstrated, by  increasing throughput without adding major new infrastructure, what can be  achieved through consultation and co-operation.  | 
  
  
    | 4.152 | 
    Increasing the capacity of the infrastructure  can be achieved in a number of ways, before actually setting out to reconstruct  the line. Improved signalling and communication systems can allow trains to  safely reduce the distance between them. Co-operatively scheduling repairs and  maintenance, to keep closures to a minimum, allows a larger number of train  slots. Where possible, the use of longer trains, double stacking of containers  and the provision of more passing loops, can also have a substantial effect on  the capacity of a network.  | 
  
  
    | 4.153 | 
    In the Committee’s  opinion, however, the greatest need for Australia is the reconstruction and  realignment of the main freight networks. This would: 
      - allow faster speeds and greater axle loads;
 
      - clear the way for longer trains and double stacked containers;
 
      - make it possible to reduce the steepness of grades, straighten lines and remove  loops; and
 
      - allow  for the elimination of many level crossings.
    | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    A Challenge | 
    
  
    | 4.154 | 
    One witness, Mr Vince O’Rourke, a former head of Queensland  Rail, encouraged the idea that the nation should move beyond the steam era and  build modern railways to cope with 21st Century demands.  | 
  
  
    | 4.155 | 
    He challenged the nation to stop thinking of  railways in 19th Century terms and to build a fast, modern network,  using proven but very modern technology: 
  …there is some real innovative and creative redevelopment in  the upgrade of the ARTC work. We will see significant reductions in time and  improved capacity of the railway. At the end of the day, it is fixing up a  railway that was designed for the steam era and we need to do something new. 
   
      Our manufacturing industry is under enormous threat. We have  seen an explosion of imports. Our industries are doing it tough, and we are  part of a global supply chain that is rapidly growing. We can see there are  significant initiatives that need to be taken. 
       
      Regarding the Melbourne to Brisbane  railway line proposal …let us build a new railway line, and a decent one. This  is a position I was advocating when I was in QR. Why don’t we do something that  the rest of the world does?…We see modern freight trains and passenger trains  throughout Europe and the great railways of North America. …We will patch up another railway and  think we are doing pretty good to get along at 80 kilometres per hour when we  should be thinking about freight trains that will travel up to 160 kilometres  per hour, which happens in other parts of the world. 
       
      We are suggesting that we should build a modern railway between  Melbourne and Brisbane on the shortest corridor of about 1,600 to 1,650  kilometres, west of the Great Dividing Range on the flat country with very low  gradients, that it should cater for high speed freight trains up to 160  kilometres per hour and double-stack trains travelling at up to 120 kilometres  per hour. It should have the capacity for fast tilting trains that would run  between Melbourne and Brisbane  and probably more importantly that would service the regional areas of southern  Queensland  and northern Victoria. 
       
      In terms of regional development, a modern railway line would  cause an explosion of logistics and economic development in northern Victoria, New    South Wales and Queensland. It is time to make a quantum  leap in the capabilities of railways. 
       
      We are doing too much patching. Why don’t we build some  really good railways? On a modern railway from Melbourne to Brisbane,  freight trains could make their journey in 15 hours. It would be overnight. It  is the just-in-time manufacturing inventory, logistics and integration with the  ports that this nation needs.
       
       
      Rather  than think we can do pretty well at 80 kilometres per hour, why don’t we lift  our minds, get into the future and start some innovative and creative solutions  that the railway industry can give this nation?125          | 
  
  
    | 4.156 | 
    Similar thoughts were expressed in Toowoomba,  where Trans Bulk Haulage said: 
  …I just find it very frustrating with the infrastructure  being patched and not really being improved. …There has not been any real money  spent. There needs to be big money spent. The government want everyone to  become more productive but they need to spend more money and they need to spend  lots and lots of it, on both rail and road. …let’s get into it and get  something organised. People are just talking and going round and round in  circles. There is nothing happening. It is very frustrating from all points.126         | 
  
  
    | 4.157 | 
    The Committee  found this a fascinating challenge. Australia is a huge country and  heavily dependent on its internal transport network. Because it is an island  and trade plays such a big role in the economy, it is also highly dependent on  easy access to the ports. It is particularly appropriate, because of the  growing congestion on the roads and the cost of the road accident toll in  lives, injuries and property damage.  | 
  
  
    | 4.158 | 
    This Committee and its predecessors have long  advocated a serious effort to raise the rail standard in Australia,  rather than being content to simply keep things running. In its 1998 report Tracking Australia, the Standing  Committee on Communications, Transport and Micreconomic Reform posed a similar  challenge: 
      On the eve of the 21st   century, the committee is conscious that concerns about the environment  and other externalities mean that rail in Australia is being seriously  considered as a viable transport option. Australia’s rail therefore has ‘to  lift its game’ and perform at international best practice levels…127         | 
  
  
  
    | 4.159  | 
    The Committee  then added: 
  …bearing in mind the Australian Transport Council …decisions  to promote rail, the committee supports an invigorated role for passenger and  freight rail in the national transport network. The committee believes that  where rail has demonstrated its reliability, timeliness, safety and service  orientation, rail provided a successful service. There is an important role for  rail in the national transport network, in particular the national interstate  rail traffic…128 
     The Committee believes that the need for rail to fulfil  the role outlined in Tracking Australia,  has grown and is now more important than ever.        | 
  
  
    | 4.160  | 
    Over the years, the argument has been that the  way to preserve regional and rural roads is to increase the share of freight  moved by rail. As this is not happening quickly enough to offset the growth in  the use of B-doubles, B-triples and other heavy road transport, not only is  rail failing, but so are the country roads. Unless serious funding is put into  one or the other, both will continue to fail.  | 
  
  
    | 4.161  | 
    Now, almost ten years later, the only freight  rail lines running at world’s best practice are the iron ore lines in the Pilbara.  | 
  
  
    | 4.162  | 
    The Committee considers that the Australian and  State Governments should take up this challenge to raise Australia’s  rail transport to world’s best practice, and quickly. The task will not be  cheap but the economic benefits will be widespread. In Tracking Australia, the report emphasised the overall benefits of a  modern, high-standard, rail system: 
      Evidence to the inquiry emphasised that increased investment  in rail infrastructure, together with continued improvements in performance by  rail operators, would lead to more effective and efficient use of the nation’s  rail assets, generating economic benefits for rail users and the wider  community.129         | 
  
  
    | 4.163  | 
    The Committee believes that if governments take  a similar funding approach to that given to roads over the last two or three  decades, the economic and social benefits would amply repay the effort. Australia would  have a high-performance rail network, the freight burden on the roads would be  reduced, and the external effects of increased transport usage would also be  reduced: effects on the environment, congestion, accidents, air and noise  pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.  | 
  
  
     | 
      | 
  
  
    Committee Assessment | 
    
  
    | 4.164  | 
    State governments have established policies to  increase the share of rail in the freight task. The Committee  is convinced that this will only be achieved to a substantial level if  infrastructure funding is concentrated on strengthening and straightening  tracks and the removal of obstacles, to allow the widest possible use of 1,800  metre trains and the double-stacking of containers.  | 
  
  
    | 4.165  | 
    The condition of the grain lines is a problem in  several states. The Committee considers that the type of structure outlined by Mr Zsombor  is worth closer examination in Australia.  The concept of local businesses and authorities arranging to take over the  short regional lines, with some help from the State or Australian governments,  could be a useful way of keeping the infrastructure available.   | 
  
  
    | 4.166  | 
    On the East Coast there are many problems facing  the rail network. The ARTC, however, is making good progress on dealing with  some of the worst problems. The Committee was pleased to find that during the  course of the inquiry, approvals were given on some very important projects:  for example, the Southern Sydney Freight Line and the announcement on the  Goonyella line in Queensland.  | 
  
  
    | 4.167  | 
    The biggest problems lie around access to Sydney.  The congestion in the city area, leading to conflict for time slots between  freight trains and passenger services, and the poor access to the city from the  north, combine to make this a planner’s nightmare. The Southern Sydney Freight  Line will help considerably, but access to Sydney  will continue to be a problem for some time yet.  | 
  
  
    | 4.168  | 
    The Committee  has a great deal of respect for Mr   O’Rourke’s views. It endorses his  recommendation that we do one major project, and do it extraordinarily well, so  it can be used as a template for greater rail productivity and efficiency.  | 
  
  
    | 4.169  | 
    The Committee  considers that it is time that Australia  made a national commitment to sharply raising the standard of the rail network  to provide a fast, modern, flexible and efficient system.   | 
  
  
    | 4.170  | 
    The losses to the national economy through the  delays at Newcastle  and Port Dalrymple are simply the highest profile problems – there are many  other examples at all levels. Overcoming these difficulties would not only  assist exporters to maximise their opportunities, but would encourage the  establishment of new industries once it was seen that reliable transport was  readily available.  | 
  
  
    | 1  | 
     Toll Holdings Limited, Transcript, 1 August 2006, Sydney,  pp.36-7. Back | 
  
  
    | 2  | 
    Australian Transport and Energy Corridor,  Transcript, 9 November 2005,  Canberra, p.6. Back | 
  
  
    | 3  | 
    Australian Rail Track  Corporation, Submission 186, p.5. Back | 
  
  
    | 4  | 
    Australian Rail Track Corporation,  Submission 186, p.5. Back | 
  
  
    | 5  | 
    NSW Government, Department of Planning,  Media Release, $200M Freight Line to  Boost Sydney Transport Network, 21 December 2006, p.1. Back | 
  
  
    | 6  | 
    Hunter Valley Coal Chain Logistics Team,  Submission 140, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 7  | 
     Toll Holdings, Transcript, 1 August 2006, Sydney,  p.42. Back | 
  
  
    | 8  | 
     Australian Rail Track Corporation,  Transcript, 6 September 2006,  Canberra, p.3. Back | 
  
  
    | 9  | 
    Exports and Infrastructure Taskforce, Australia’s Export Infrastructure,  Report to the Prime Minister, Canberra, May 2005, p.34. Back | 
  
  
    | 10  | 
    Hunter Business  Chamber, Transcript, 30 January 2006, Newcastle,  p.44. Back | 
  
  
    | 11  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Transcript, 30 January 2006, Newcastle, p.44. Back | 
  
  
    | 12  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Submission 131,  p.7. Back | 
  
  
    | 13  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Transcript, 30 January 2006, Newcastle, p.45. Back | 
  
  
    | 14  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Transcript, 30 January 2006, Newcastle, p.45. Back  | 
  
  
    | 15  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Submission 131,  p.5 and Hunter Area Consultative Committee,  Transcript, 30 January 2006,  Newcastle,  pp.57-8. Back | 
  
  
    | 16  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Transcript, 30 January 2006, Newcastle, p.49. Back | 
  
  
    | 17  | 
    Hunter Business Chamber, Transcript, 30 January 2006, Newcastle, pp.47-8. Back | 
  
  
    | 18  | 
     Professor Phillip   Laird, Submission 139, p.3. Back | 
  
  
    | 19  | 
    Professor Phillip   Laird, Submission 139, p.3. Back | 
  
  
    | 20  | 
    Queensland Agricultural Merchants Inc,  Transcript, 7 April 2006,  Toowoomba, pp.3-4. Back | 
  
  
    | 21 | 
    Queensland Agricultural Merchants Inc,  Transcript, 7 April 2006,  Toowoomba, p.5. Back | 
  
  
    | 22 | 
    Queensland Agricultural Merchants Inc,  Transcript, 7 April 2006,  Toowoomba, p.7. Back | 
  
  
    | 23 | 
    Ipswich City Council, Transcript, 7 April 2006, Toowoomba,  p.44. Back | 
  
  
    | 24 | 
    Cunningham Rail Link Committee,  Submission 72, p.1. Back | 
  
  
    | 25 | 
    Cunningham Rail Link Committee, Submission 72, pp.1-2. Back | 
  
  
    | 26 | 
    Shire of Warwick, Submission 72, p.1. Back | 
  
  
    | 27 | 
    Warwick Shire Council, Stanthorpe Shire  Council, Boonah Shire Council and Cunningham Rail Link Committee,  Transcript, 7 April 2006, Toowoomba, pp.17 and 21. Back | 
  
  
    | 28 | 
    ABARE, Lindsay Fairhead, Robert Curtotti,  Chris Rumley and Jane Mélanie, Australian  Coal Exports: Outlook to 2025 and the Role of Infrastructure, ABARE  Research Report 06.15, October 2006, p.50.  Back | 
  
  
    | 29 | 
    Weekend Australian, $1bn rail logjam hits jobs, exports, 26-27 May 2007, p.1.  Back | 
  
  
    | 30 | 
    E.G.: BHP Billiton Mitsubishi Alliance,  Transcript, 6 April 2006,  Brisbane,  pp.31-32. Back | 
  
  
    | 31 | 
    Queensland Government,  Department of Natural Resources and Mines, Queensland’s  World-class Coals: Mine Production and Developments, December 2005, p.17. Back | 
  
  
    | 32 | 
    Queensland Government, Department of  Natural Resources and Mines, Queensland’s  World-class Coals: Mine Production and Developments, December 2005, p.17. Back | 
  
  
    | 33 | 
    Margaret Wenham  & Tony Grant-Taylor, Rail link hinges on miners:Lucas,  Courier Mail, Saturday, 9   June 2007, p.10. Back | 
  
  
    | 34 | 
    Margaret Wenham  & Tony Grant-Taylor, Rail link hinges on miners:Lucas,  Courier Mail, Saturday, 9   June 2007, p.10. Back | 
  
  
    | 35 | 
    Margaret Wenham  & Tony Grant-Taylor, Rail link hinges on miners:Lucas,  Courier Mail, Saturday, 9   June 2007, p.10. Back | 
  
  
    | 36 | 
    Margaret Wenham  & Tony Grant-Taylor, Rail link hinges on miners:Lucas,  Courier Mail, Saturday, 9   June 2007, p.10. Back | 
  
  
    | 37 | 
    Queensland Government, Department of  Natural Resources and Mines, Queensland’s  World-class Coals: Mine Production and Developments, December 2005, p.17. Back | 
  
  
    | 38 | 
    New England North West Area Consultative  Committee, Submission 5, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 39 | 
    Western Downs Regional Organisation of  Councils, Submission 50, p.18. Back | 
  
  
    | 40 | 
    Western Downs Regional Organisation of  Councils and Chinchilla Shire Council, Transcript, 7 April 2006, Toowoomba, pp.62-3 and 67. Back | 
  
  
    | 41 | 
    Moree Plains Shire Council, Gilgandra  Shire Council, Dunavant Enterprises and Mr Kevin Humphries, Transcript, 7 April  2006, Toowoomba, p.24. Back | 
  
  
    | 42 | 
    Glen Innes Section 355 Transport Committee,  Submission 87, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 43 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australasia,  Submission 14, p.10. Back | 
  
  
    | 44 | 
     Australian Chamber of Commerce and  Industry, Submission 57, p.22. Back | 
  
  
    | 45 | 
    Australian Chamber of Commerce and  Industry, Submission 57, p.22. Back | 
  
  
    | 46 | 
    Latrobe City Council, Submission 58, p.8. Back | 
  
  
    | 47 | 
    Alliance of Councils for Rail Freight  Development, Submission 26, p.1. Back | 
  
  
    | 48 | 
    Sunraysia Mallee Economic Development  Board, Submission 22, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 49 | 
    Mildura Rural City Council, Wentworth  Shire Council, Sunraysia Area Consultative Committee  and Sunraysia Mallee Economic Development Board, Submission 22,  
pp.2 and 5. Back | 
  
  
    | 50 | 
    Victorian Government, Minister for  Transport, Media Release, Government  Announces $73 million investment for first stage of Mildura line upgrade, 13 May 2006. Back | 
  
  
    | 51 | 
    Victorian Government, Office of the  Premier, Media release, Mildura Rail Line  Upgrade Works to start in September, 28 May 2007, Melbourne, p.1. Back | 
  
  
    | 52 | 
    City of Casey, Submission 83, p.4. Back | 
  
  
    | 53 | 
    City of Casey, Submission 83, p.4. Back | 
  
  
    | 54 | 
    City of Casey, Submission 83, p.5. Back | 
  
  
    | 55 | 
    South West Development Commission,  Transcript, 7 March 2006,  Bunbury, p.16. Back | 
  
  
    | 56 | 
    WestNet Rail, Transcript, 7 March 2006, Bunbury, p.63. Back | 
  
  
    | 57 | 
    WA Plantation Resources, Transcript, 7 March 2006, Bunbury, p.25. Back | 
  
  
    | 58 | 
    WA Plantation Resources, Transcript, 7 March 2006, Bunbury, p.25. Back | 
  
  
    | 59 | 
    WA Plantation Resources, Transcript, 7 March 2006, Bunbury, p.33. Back | 
  
  
    | 60 | 
    The Griffin Coal  Mining Company, Transcript, 7 March 2006, Bunbury, p.41. Back | 
  
  
    | 61 | 
    The Griffin Coal Mining Company,  Transcript, 7 March 2006,  Bunbury, pp.42 and 46. Back | 
  
  
    | 62 | 
    The Griffin Coal Mining Company,  Transcript, 7 March 2006,  Bunbury, pp.48-9. Back | 
  
  
    | 63 | 
    City of Bunbury, Transcript, 7 March 2006, Bunbury, p.87. Back | 
  
  
    | 64 | 
    Great Southern Timber Industry Road  Evaluation Strategy Group, Transcript, Albany,  
8 March 2006,  p.20. Back | 
  
  
    | 65 | 
    Timber 2020, Transcript, 8 March 2006, Albany, p.23. Back | 
  
  
    | 66 | 
    Timber 2020, Transcript, 8 March 2006, Albany, p.26. Back | 
  
  
    | 67 | 
    Shire of Esperance, Transcript, 9 March 206, p.10.  Back | 
  
  
    | 68 | 
    Shire of Esperance, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  p.11.  Back  | 
  
  
    | 69 | 
    Shire of Esperance, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  p.12. Back | 
  
  
    | 70 | 
    The City of Kalgoorlie-Boulder,  Transcript, 9 March 2006,  Esperance, p.28. Back | 
  
  
    | 71 | 
    Co-operative Bulk Handling Ltd,  Transcript, 9 March 2006,  Esperance, p.36. Back | 
  
  
    | 72 | 
    Portman Ltd, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  pp.44-5 and 47-8.  Back | 
  
  
    | 73 | 
    Portman Ltd, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  pp.44-5. Back | 
  
  
    | 74 | 
    Portman Ltd, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  p.46. Back | 
  
  
    | 75 | 
     Golden West Resources Ltd, http://www.goldenwestresources.com/downloads/070621_strachan.pdf,  accessed  
28 June 2007. Back | 
  
  
    | 76 | 
    Golden West Resources Ltd, http://www.goldenwestresources.com/downloads/070621_strachan.pdf,  accessed  
28 June 2007. Back | 
  
  
    | 77 | 
    Hon Murray Criddle MLA, Member for the  Agricultural Region of WA, Transcript, 6 March 2006, Geraldton, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 78 | 
    Hon Murray Criddle MLA, Member for the  Agricultural Region of WA, Transcript, 6 March 2006, Geraldton, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 79 | 
    Mid West Development Commission,  Submission 102, p.3. Back | 
  
  
    | 80 | 
    Hon Murray Criddle MLA, Member for the  Agricultural Region of WA and Mid West Chamber of Commerce and Industry,  Transcript, 6 March 2006, Geraldton, pp.3-4 and 9. Back | 
  
  
    | 81 | 
    Golden West Resources Ltd, http://www.goldenwestresources.com/downloads/070621_strachan.pdf,  accessed  
28 June 2007. Back | 
  
  
    | 82 | 
    Mid West Chamber of Commerce and Industry,  Transcript, 6 March 2006,  Geraldton, p.16. Back | 
  
  
    | 83 | 
    Glenelg Shire Council, Submission 10,  Attachment A, pp.6-7. Back | 
  
  
    | 84 | 
    Glenelg Shire Council, Submission 10,  Attachment A, pp.6-7. Back | 
  
  
    | 85 | 
    Glenelg Shire Council, Submission 10,  Attachment A, pp.6, 8 and 10 and Limestone Coast Regional Development Board  Ltd, Submission 39, p.1. Back | 
  
  
    | 86 | 
    Glenelg Shire Council, Submission 10, p.1  and Attachment A, p.3. Back | 
  
  
    | 87 | 
    Government of Tasmania, Submission 53, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 88 | 
    The Hon Mark Vaile MP, Acting Prime Minister and  Minister for Transport and Regional Services, Media Release 042MV/2007, 15 March 2007. Back | 
  
  
    | 89 | 
    The Hon Mark Vaile MP, Acting Prime Minister and  Minister for Transport and Regional Services, Media Release 042MV/2007, 15 March 2007. Back | 
  
  
    | 90 | 
    Darwin Port Corporation, Transcript, 27 September 2005, Darwin, p.8. Back | 
  
  
    | 91 | 
    Darwin Port Corporation, Transcript, 27 September 2005, Darwin, p.4. Back | 
  
  
    | 92 | 
    Australian Wheat Board, Submission 97, pp.10-11. Back | 
  
  
    | 93 | 
    Australian Wheat Board, Submission 97,  p.14. Back | 
  
  
    | 94 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australia,  Transcript, 1 August 2006,  Sydney,  p.4. Back | 
  
  
    | 95 | 
    Australasian Railway Association,  Submission 70, pp.6-7. Back | 
  
  
    | 96 | 
    Co-operative Bulk Handling Ltd,  Transcript, 9 March 2006,  Esperance, p.33. Back | 
  
  
    | 97 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australia,  Transcript, 1 August 2006,  Sydney,  p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 98 | 
    Riverina Eastern Regional Organisation of  Councils, Submission 92, pp.1 and 3. Back | 
  
  
    | 99 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australia,  Transcript, 1 August 2006,  Sydney,  p.4.  Back | 
  
  
    | 100 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australia,  Transcript, 1 August 2006,  Sydney,  pp.4-5. Back | 
  
  
    | 101 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australasia, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.17. Back | 
  
  
    | 102 | 
    Toll Holdings, Transcript, 1 August 2006, Sydney,  p.43. Back | 
  
  
    | 103 | 
    Eyre Peninsula Local Government  Association, Submission 1, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 104 | 
    Eyre Peninsula Local Government  Association, Submission 1, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 105 | 
    Eyre Peninsula Local Government  Association, Submission 1, p.2. Back | 
  
  
    | 106 | 
    Shire of Esperance, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  p.12. Back | 
  
  
    | 107 | 
    Shire of Esperance, Transcript, 9 March 2006, Esperance,  p.12. Back | 
  
  
    | 108 | 
    Co-operative Bulk Handling Ltd,  Transcript, 9 March 2006,  Esperance, pp.32 and 37. Back | 
  
  
    | 109 | 
    Co-operative Bulk Handling Ltd,  Transcript, 9 March 2006,  Esperance, p.35. Back | 
  
  
    | 110 | 
    Matthew Stevens, Bitter Harvest: train pain means farmers  can’t cash in on bumper crop, The Australian, 27 June 2007, p.19. Back | 
  
  
    | 111 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.3.  Back | 
  
  
    | 112 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.3. Back | 
  
  
    | 113 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, pp.4-5.  Back | 
  
  
    | 114 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.5. Back | 
  
  
    | 115 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.6. Back | 
  
  
    | 116 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.6. Back | 
  
  
    | 117 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.7. Back | 
  
  
    | 118 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor and Railway Technical Society of  Australasia, Transcript, 14   February 2007, Canberra,  pp.7-8. Back | 
  
  
    | 119 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.11. Back | 
  
  
    | 120 | 
    Mr Ed Zsombor, Transcript, 14 February 2007, Canberra, p.16. Back | 
  
  
    | 121 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australasia,  Exhibit 34, Study Tour – Branch Lines of  NSW – Study Tour Notes, 22-25 March 2006, p.8. Back | 
  
  
    | 122 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australasia,  Exhibit 34, Study Tour – Branch Lines of  NSW – Study Tour Notes, 22-25 March 2006, p.25. Back | 
  
  
    | 123 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australasia,  Exhibit 34, Study Tour – Branch Lines of  NSW – Study Tour Notes, 22-25 March 2006, p.30. Back | 
  
  
    | 124 | 
    Railway Technical Society of Australasia,  Exhibit 34, Study Tour – Branch Lines of  NSW – Study Tour Notes, 22-25 March 2006, pp.30-31. Back | 
  
  
    | 125 | 
    Mr Vince O’Rourke, Transcript, 1 August 2006, Sydney,  pp.14-15. Back | 
  
  
    | 126 | 
    Trans Bulk Haulage Pty Ltd and Australian  Trucking Association, Transcript,  
7 April 2006,  Toowoomba, p.61. Back | 
  
  
    | 127 | 
    House of Representatives Standing  Committee on Communications, Transport and Micreconomic Reform, Tracking Australia, Canberra, July 1998, p.xxv. Back | 
  
  
    | 128 | 
    House of Representatives Standing Committee on Communications, Transport and Micreconomic  Reform, Tracking Australia, July  1998, Canberra,  p.4. Back | 
  
  
    | 129 | 
    House of Representatives Standing Committee on Communications, Transport and  Micreconomic Reform, Tracking Australia,  Canberra, July  1998, p.150. Back |