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Chris5156 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 10, 2019 20:09Trains carrying fuel or other hazardous loads don't carry remotely the same risks as fuel tankers in road tunnels, for all sorts of obvious reasons.
I disagree. There was a fuel train which caught fire in a Pennine tunnel in 1984 and a huge fire developed that burned for days.
fras wrote: ↑Tue Sep 10, 2019 19:13Why not just bar all bulk DGs, and make the trucks go round the other way, the M25 is a circle, after all. Heath and Safety fascists strike again ! Network Rail don't insist on all trains being stopped to allow freight trains with DGs to pass through tunnels, it would cause complete chaos. This includes the Severn Tunnel that is four miles long under the Bristol Channel
Making fuel tankers travel an extra 100 miles around the most congested side of the M25 could just as easily be described as "health and safety fascists strike again". The current solution of escorting loads at least allows the tankers to use the tunnel, rather than making the most easterly usable crossing of the Thames the one at Staines.
Indeed, a terrible idea. And given many of them will be making use of the M2-M11 stretch only, and these would re-route probably onto the M1 if going round the long way, it would add to congestion and journey times elsewhere.
fras wrote: ↑Tue Sep 10, 2019 19:13Why not just bar all bulk DGs, and make the trucks go round the other way, the M25 is a circle, after all. Heath and Safety fascists strike again ! Network Rail don't insist on all trains being stopped to allow freight trains with DGs to pass through tunnels, it would cause complete chaos. This includes the Severn Tunnel that is four miles long under the Bristol Channel
Making fuel tankers travel an extra 100 miles around the most congested side of the M25 could just as easily be described as "health and safety fascists strike again". The current solution of escorting loads at least allows the tankers to use the tunnel, rather than making the most easterly usable crossing of the Thames the one at Staines.
Indeed, a terrible idea. And given many of them will be making use of the M2-M11 stretch only, and these would re-route probably onto the M1 if going round the long way, it would add to congestion and journey times elsewhere.
Agreed this is the most concentrated stretch. Most of the tankers I see are travelling to/from just north of the river in Thurrock where the petroleum products terminals are.
Chris5156 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 10, 2019 20:09Trains carrying fuel or other hazardous loads don't carry remotely the same risks as fuel tankers in road tunnels, for all sorts of obvious reasons.
I disagree. There was a fuel train which caught fire in a Pennine tunnel in 1984 and a huge fire developed that burned for days.
In contrast I believe not one tanker has caught fire in a road tunnel.
There's the disputed death toll from the Salang Road Tunnel fire in Afghanistan where a tanker exploded in it. At least several hundred died in that one.
You don't need a fuel tanker to cause a major tunnel disaster. The Mont Blanc disaster was started by a fire in a truck carrying margarine.
Bryn Terminally cynical, unimpressed, and nearly Middle Age already. She said life was like a motorway; dull, grey, and long.
Has a second bridge at Dartford been ruled out at this point?? I’m not set against the Gateway Crossing, but it is considerably to the east, so must be anticipating Channel-M1(1)/M6 flows.
Would a second bridge still make sense at that point?? If I was in government, I’d be looking to see if the tunnels can be detrunked or retired.
fras wrote: ↑Wed Sep 11, 2019 14:25
Yes, so do I
I would like to read the risk assessment that imposed the current process. Is this in the public domain ?
I'm sure if you made the right enquiries you could get your hands on something relevant, yes.
Unless I misread it for the year to March 2020, the income was £209 million up from £195.7 million and the expenditure was £102 million down from £104.3 million.
So a nicer little earner for the Tax Man.
I don't mind paying a toll if it goes towards the upkeep of the infrastructure I am using, but am annoyed with profiteering from them. Unless the profit is going to the Severn Crossings given they are now free!!!!!
Unless I misread it for the year to March 2020, the income was £209 million up from £195.7 million and the expenditure was £102 million down from £104.3 million.
So a nicer little earner for the Tax Man.
I don't mind paying a toll if it goes towards the upkeep of the infrastructure I am using, but am annoyed with profiteering from them. Unless the profit is going to the Severn Crossings given they are now free!!!!!
But it's not a toll - it's a road user charging scheme.
Unless I misread it for the year to March 2020, the income was £209 million up from £195.7 million and the expenditure was £102 million down from £104.3 million.
So a nicer little earner for the Tax Man.
I don't mind paying a toll if it goes towards the upkeep of the infrastructure I am using, but am annoyed with profiteering from them. Unless the profit is going to the Severn Crossings given they are now free!!!!!
But it's not a toll - it's a road user charging scheme.
Yeah, right !
A toll in all but name. I wonder how they'll collect the charge from all the foreign-registered vehicles now.
Unless I misread it for the year to March 2020, the income was £209 million up from £195.7 million and the expenditure was £102 million down from £104.3 million.
So a nicer little earner for the Tax Man.
I don't mind paying a toll if it goes towards the upkeep of the infrastructure I am using, but am annoyed with profiteering from them. Unless the profit is going to the Severn Crossings given they are now free!!!!!
But it's not a toll - it's a road user charging scheme.
Yeah, right !
A toll in all but name. I wonder how they'll collect the charge from all the foreign-registered vehicles now.
It is still a toll. If it in surplus, that is if anything a good thing. At some point the tunnels and bridge will need hefty retrofits or even replacement.
JammyDodge wrote: ↑Fri Jan 22, 2021 15:52
It is still a toll. If it in surplus, that is if anything a good thing. At some point the tunnels and bridge will need hefty retrofits or even replacement.
No its NOT
You need to pay attention to what the LAW says.
Basically the authorising acts for construction of the tunnels and subsequently the QE2 bridge were crystal clear that the tolls MUST end once the construction costs were paid off. NOTHING was said about future maintenance costs in the original authorising acts - that was assumed to be paid for out of general taxation as per the rest of the road network.
NEW legislation was passed in parliament which converted said Toll to a 'Congestion Charge' which allowed a the fees to remain and HM Treasury to keep a handy revenue stream with only the vaguest of hints that it might be reinvested in transport. The fact that no charge is lea vied overnight (in contrast to all other regular tolls) is another hint that the legislation covering Dartford is the same as that covering the Central London Congestion Charge....
Chris5156 wrote: ↑Tue Sep 10, 2019 20:09Trains carrying fuel or other hazardous loads don't carry remotely the same risks as fuel tankers in road tunnels, for all sorts of obvious reasons.
I disagree. There was a fuel train which caught fire in a Pennine tunnel in 1984 and a huge fire developed that burned for days.
In contrast I believe not one tanker has caught fire in a road tunnel.
They did a test fire in the Hatfield Tunnel as I recall. Its not just tankers that are a risk of course , food stuffs such as edible oils and fats are just as dangerous and there have been fires fed by that. Even if the load is inert an HGV carries a pretty fair load of diesel. In the case of the Mont Blanc tunnel fire the load of edible fats in the truck that caught fire was equivalent to 23,000-litres of oil. The Gotthard Tunnel disaster was fed by diesel on a damaged HGV while the 1949 Holland Tunnel fire was fuelled by carbon disulphide in drums. If you get 40 vehicles in a narrow road tunnel and there is a fire, the flammable materials are not just the fuel but all the plastics now increasingly used in their construction.
Then there was the Los Alfaques disaster where an LPG truck going past the Los Alfaques campsite in Spain crashed releasing 23 tons of highly flammable liquefied propylene. 217 people (including the driver) were killed and 200 more severely burned.
Trains carrying fuel in bulk rarely carry passengers as well and of course trains will be more widely separated than trucks will be and rarely collide. That said there was a major fire on a freight shuttle in the Channel Tunnel. Thankfully passengers and train crew were able to escape into the safety tunnel but there was enough damage to close that bore for a prolonged period.
Phil wrote: ↑Sun Jan 24, 2021 10:38Basically the authorising acts for construction of the tunnels and subsequently the QE2 bridge were crystal clear that the tolls MUST end once the construction costs were paid off. NOTHING was said about future maintenance costs in the original authorising acts - that was assumed to be paid for out of general taxation as per the rest of the road network.
NEW legislation was passed in parliament which converted said Toll to a 'Congestion Charge' which allowed a the fees to remain and HM Treasury to keep a handy revenue stream with only the vaguest of hints that it might be reinvested in transport. The fact that no charge is lea vied overnight (in contrast to all other regular tolls) is another hint that the legislation covering Dartford is the same as that covering the Central London Congestion Charge....
As far as the public is concerned, a toll is a charge and a charge is a toll. The fact that there is a different legal mechanism behind them makes no meaningful difference to the fact that as well as general taxation, you have to make a specific payment to use that road/bridge/tunnel. The fact that the crossing was built on the understanding that tolls would cease when the costs were paid off (in 2003) but that was effectively overridden by having a new charging system introduced in its place strokes most people as a pretty egregious deceit, and the fact that they had to fudge things by changing the charging system shows it up for what it is.
Interestingly, the overnight charge was only dropped in 2008 (I had thought it was much earlier than that but turns out that my memory was wrong!), several years after the toll ceased and the new charge imposed.
Stevie D wrote: ↑Sun Jan 24, 2021 18:24
...
Interestingly, the overnight charge was only dropped in 2008 (I had thought it was much earlier than that but turns out that my memory was wrong!), several years after the toll ceased and the new charge imposed.
In 2003, up until 2008, a flat fee of £1 was introduced overnight (between 10pm and 6am) for all vehicle classes, resulting in a saving for non-car drivers using the crossing at night. Plus from 2003 motorcycles got free passage at all times - they paid 40p prior to this.
Stevie D wrote: ↑Sun Jan 24, 2021 18:24
As far as the public is concerned, a toll is a charge and a charge is a toll. The fact that there is a different legal mechanism behind them makes no meaningful difference to the fact that as well as general taxation, you have to make a specific payment to use that road/bridge/tunnel. The fact that the crossing was built on the understanding that tolls would cease when the costs were paid off (in 2003) but that was effectively overridden by having a new charging system introduced in its place strokes most people as a pretty egregious deceit, and the fact that they had to fudge things by changing the charging system shows it up for what it is.
Interestingly, the overnight charge was only dropped in 2008 (I had thought it was much earlier than that but turns out that my memory was wrong!), several years after the toll ceased and the new charge imposed.
It should be pointed out that there are a number of toll bridges which have been around for a very long time and which charge tolls to provide funds for maintenance, there is nothing that prevents a bridge company continuing to charge tolls indefinitely. As they were established by an act of parliament, the problems is that the toll charge was usually specified in the act. The Clifton Suspension Bridge is a good example. The initial act of Parliament was passed in 1830 with a number of new acts varying the conditions until a new act of Parliament was passed in 1952 which authorises the trustees to vary the conditions and amount of the toll.
See. http://www.notolls.org.uk/pdfs/clifton1 ... istory.pdf
There is nothing inherently wrong with introducing a charge to provide funds for maintenance but clearly that should be proportionate to establishing a fund for maintaining the structure rather than becoming a nice little earner. Its also reasonable to charge for services such as vehicle escort through the tunnels.
If memory serves, the official reason (rightly or wrongly) for retaining the tolls at Dartford was to try and manage demand. The fact that there's no alternative crossing point between Dartford and Blackwall/Woolwich, however, makes for a significant diversion to avoid using it in most cases.
Needless to say, the switch to "Free Flow" has done very little to improve traffic flow heading South to North, given the proximity of the on-slip at Junction 1a to the former toll plaza area, which is around half the distance (if not less) of that from Junction 31 to a similar point on the North side.