Title: Barton Family Response to NET Phase 2
1Barton Family Responseto NET Phase 2
- John and Andy Barton
- Wednesday 21st November 2007
2Plan of Talk
- Our plot of land
- Pros and cons of NET
- Appraisal of the statement of case and proofs of
evidence - Issues not previously examined
3Our Land 58 High Road (Plot 150)
Corner of land to be acquired for NET 2 Left
turns only? Nowhere to turn round.
4Our Land 58 High Road (Plot 150)
- Compulsory Purchase of Front corner
- Access will be across a loading bay if allowed
- Left turns only and nowhere to turn round safely
- Loss of future commercial development
- Fight for compensation
- We dont trust the compensation process
- In limbo while NET 2 is decided
- Time and expense of getting compensation
- Two planning applications needed with and
without!
5Pros and Cons of NET 2
- Transport link to poor and isolated
neighbourhoods - Disabled access
- Reduced journey times
- Run on electricity not oil, so more sustainable
in the short term - Improved air quality locally
- Reduction in car use will be minimal
- Increased carbon emissions
- Noisy
- Expensive to build and operate
- Long build time with increased congestion in
construction time - Houses demolished
- Power cuts?
- Economic recession expected so tram is not
needed
6Appraisal of NET Documents1. Congestion
- Important case for tram word count 59
- Statement of case, appendix C, para. 2.1.18
- NET Phase Two would reduce the growth of peak
hour car journeys to and from all central area
locations by one third between 2006 and 2021 to
only 9. - Also in the busy south and south-west segments
of the city outside the ring road between the
A453 and A609, NET Phase Two is expected to
reduce the increase in peak hour vehicle
kilometres during the period 2006 to 2021 from
over 3 to less than 1. - NET phase 2 will reduce car journey by only 4.5
in the central area and by 2 in south and
south-west. - Congestion is going to get worse but slightly
less quickly! - During construction it will be worse.
7Appraisal of NET Documents2. Climate Change
- Part of case for tram word count 8
- BUT, the EIA (section 9.2) says Significant
effect not anticipated ! - Appendix C section 4.3
- Annual electricity 7MWh (should be 7000MWh)
- Electricity generation 3000 tonnes CO2
- Car journeys saved 4000 tonnes CO2
- But these numbers are based on an average of day
and night, week, weekend and holiday. - The trams run during the day, especially in rush
hour, consuming the most dirty electricity!
8Electricity Generation on a Typical Summer Day
(Data from National Grid 2002)
Tram adds to coal burn
6 am
10 pm
9Electricity Generation on a Typical Winter Day
(Data from National Grid 2002)
Tram adds to coal burn
6 am
10 pm
10Near-Term Carbon Emissions
- Average grid electricity gives 0.44kg CO2 per kWh
of electricity OK - BUT day time marginal electricity is mainly from
coal-fired generation, e.g. from
Radcliffe-on-Soar, a 40 year old power station at
only 35 efficiency! - Coal-fired generation emits 0.6 to 1.0 kg CO2 per
kWh of electricity - 7000 MWh of electricity per year emits at least
4200 Mt CO2 Thats worse than cars!
11Long Term Carbon Emissions
- Emissions from electricity generation can be
reduced but so can emissions from road transport
12Appraisal of NET Documents3. Noise
- Wheel squeal is worse than general low-frequency
rumble for some people, especially late at night
and early in the morning
13Appraisal of NET Documents4. Financial Case
- Where does the estimate of 1 billion of value
come from? Numbers are hard to decipher. - Using a discount rate of 5 and 30 years, the
Present Value to annual ratio is about 16. So
NET2 is valued at 62.5 million per year. - With 13 million journeys per year and 15 minutes
saved per journey, NET phase 2 saves 3.25 million
people-hours per year? - This values peoples time at 19 per hour?
14Macro-economics Peak OilFigure courtesy of
Uppsala Hydrocarbon Depletion Study Group, and
ASPO, the Association for the study of peak oil
15Effects of Peak Oil
- With demand from China and India increasing, oil
price is heading towards 100 per barrel NOW and
could get much higher
Expect a recession worse than the 70s and early
80s coming your way soon!
16What Peak Oil Means for NET
- On one hand, a recession means that fewer people
will travel congestion will not grow so the
need for the tram is reduced - On the other hand, we desperately need to reduce
oil imports, so the tram might be very valuable
17Other Technical Issues
- Regenerative Braking?
- Do the Bombardier trams have the MITRAC option?
- If not, then NET is throwing away half its
electricity! - About 350,000 per year!
- And 2000 tonnes of unnecessary CO2 per year
- Power Cuts?
- Anything could happen in the next 20 years
- Over 1MW of backup generators needed
- Dead Sections of Overhead Line?
- A Battery onboard trams?
18Alternatives
- A cycle route network, segregated from traffic
would really reduce congestion and carbon
emissions. It would help people stay healthy and
fight obesity. Back-road routes across barriers
are needed, e.g. across canals, rivers, railway
lines, major roads and junctions. - A road/ bus lane / cycle link over the Trent? For
some commuters, this would save several miles
each day and cut congestion at the bridges.
19Conclusions
- As a family, we are opposed to the tram
- Time, expense and stress of fighting for
compensation - The good and bad points about NET Ph. 2
- We dont think the tram is a really bad proposal,
just not the right one for the area - You need to think about
- Wider economics
- Energy sources
- Carbon emissions
- Regenerative braking
- Power Cuts
- Alternatives