Amtrak Spending $2.4 Billion on New 'Faster' Trains That Probably Won't Go Any Faster
The big purchase is a good metaphor for the state of high speed rail in America right now, where politically driven promises can't overcome hard reality.

Amtrak's announcement that it plans to spend $2.4 billion upgrading its fleet of Acela trains is a little bit like a guy who plans to buy a new Ferrari to use on his daily commute and nothing else.
Sure, you've got a flashy new toy that can outrun anything else on the road—but if the roads are clogged and you can't put the pedal down to really make that baby hum, then what's the point?
The 28 new trains will be running by 2019 and will be able to go 160 mph, according to Amtrak. That's 25 mph faster than the Acela's current top speed. That modest increase in speed is a key part of Amtrak's decision to purchase the new trains—or at least a key part of their public sales pitch—and was dutifully reported in the media as evidence that the government-run train system would soon provide faster service up and down the east coast.
Is this the European-style high speed rail of progressive dreams? Amtrak's president and CEO, Joe Boardman, seems to think so. He said the new trains will provide passengers with "the experience of the future."
The reality of the present suggests a different outcome.
Even if the new trains are capable of going faster, that doesn't mean they actually will. In fact, they probably won't, because the current Acela almost never reaches top speed. Like highways, railroads have speed limits that take into account infrastructure and congestion. Most of the Northeast Corridor between Washington, D.C., and Boston is crowded with slower commuter trains and traverses rail lines that aren't capable of handling an Acela train at top speed.
According to Amtrak's official Northeast Corridor timetable (which contains the speed limits for every section of rail between D.C. and Boston), there are just three small patches where the trains are allowed to go 135 mph or faster.
Going north to south, the first is a 50-mile stretch in Rhode Island and eastern Connecticut, followed by a 25-mile stretch in central New Jersey and then a 20-mile stretch south of Wilmington, Delaware and into the very tip of northeastern Maryland. That's all.
"The reality is some of the $2.45 billion will be spent improving a short stretch of track between Washington and Baltimore, but this is likely to shave no more than a few minutes off its train times," says Randal O'Toole, a senior fellow on transportation issues at the Cato Institute.
Between New York and Washington, the current average speed of Amtrak's fastest "high-speed" Acela is 82 mph, but most run at about 78 mph, O'Toole's research shows.
"Will the $2.45 billion loan allow Amtrak to boost that average speed to more than 85? Probably not," he says.
Meanwhile, Amtrak has a $21 billion maintenance backlog. Upgrades that improve safety and reliability along the route would be welcome, and maybe some of the aging Acela cars are due for replacement—but does that mean they all need to be scrapped and replaced?
In some ways, this latest purchase is a metaphor for the state of high speed rail in America right now. The Obama administration and Amtrak officials have spent the last eight years promising that railroads—a technology of the 19th and early 20th centuries—would be the transportation system of the future. Those grand plans to reshape how Americans travel keep running into some pesky facts of life in the 21st Century: like the fact that most of America is not densely populated enough to make high speed rail work the way it does in Japan or Germany, or the fact that there's a limited amount of space on train lines in the northeast.
President Barack Obama started beating the drum for high speed rail even before he became president. The federal stimulus bill, which Obama signed into law in February 2009, contained $8 billion for high speed rail projects. A quarter of that money was earmarked for a high speed rail project in California that's more than a decade beyond schedule and billions of dollars over-budget. He kept pushing for more, including a promise made in his 2010 State of the Union address to provide 80 percent of Americans with access to high speed rail within 25 years.
After the speech his administration laid out ambitious plans for high speed rail corridors in the northeast, yes, but also across the southeast, in Texas, in California and a few other places where it wasn't needed and didn't make sense.
"I think President Obama would like to be known as the high-speed rail president, and I think he can be," Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood told NPR at the time.
As Obama gets ready to leave office, that dream of a European-like high speed rail system running from Boston to Washington, D.C., is likely an impossible one, because of the lack of a dedicated line not shared by slower commuter trains.
A European-style high speed rail system would have to operate on its own right-of-way, but thats a problem too. There's simply not enough available space in the densely populated northeast. Acquiring a new railroad right-of-way by buying up some of the most expensive real estate in the country is simply unaffordable even for the federal government, and relying on a massive application of eminent domain would uproot untold hundreds of families and businesses while still being prohibitively expensive.
Amtrak says a project like that would cost $150 billion and take 25 years—and that's before the inevitable delays and cost overruns.
"There's no conceivable way to generate enough traffic and revenue to cover the capital costs of such a project," said Bob Poole, director of transportation policy at the Reason Foundation (which publishes this blog).
Considering all those constraints, the Acela is actually pretty good. It gets you from city to city without having to sit in traffic or endure a TSA pat-down.
It suffers because there are lots of political reasons for overpromising what high speed rail in America could be. Once you set aside the aspirational rhetoric, the reality is that we're probably never going to have trains that actually run at 200 MPH or even 160 MPH for more than a few miles at a time—no matter how much money Amtrak spends on fancy new railcars.
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For the speeds they go they might as well just use the same trains as they do on MetroNorth (ok, maybe slightly better interior) and put the rest of the dough into fixing the woefully outdated track and signal system. At least that would have the side benefit of making the commuter lines run a bit better too.
My guess is the track maintenance is a different union. They'll get theirs another time.
Buying the new trains might be political ammunition to update the tracks?
Why is it that Politicians are sooooooo in love with rail transport? They can't ALL have spent the best summer of their lives bumming around Europe on a Eurail pass.
Because rail transport is the most cost efficient way to get boxcars loaded with dissidents to the FEMA camps! /Loyal Infowars Reader
And frankly People don't need so many destinations. What is a "mattapan", even?
It's a collective form of transport. Politicians love collective anything; they hate individual anything.
Except when they ride in their individual limos.
Public transportion is for the peons, not the nomenklatura.
Their limos may not be public transportation, but they're certainly public property
The Obama administration and Amtrak officials have spent the last eight years promising that railroads?a technology of the 19th and early 20th centuries?would be the transportation system of the future.
You know who else wanted to get people into trains?
Toby Low, 1st Baron Aldington?
E.H. Harriman?
Dagny Taggart?
The O'Jays?
The Shangri-La's?
George Pullman?
Thomas Durant?
Sheena Easton?
Gladys Knight and the Pips?
They go 11
May as well say the transportation system of the future is elaborate carriages drawn by robotic horses struck with fiber optic buggy whips.
When I've traveled on an employer's dime I've always enjoyed paying the extra $400 or so to take the Acela vs the standard train. It's a small price to pay for shitty wifi, marginally more comfort, and 30 extra minutes.
WIFI baby. WIFI!
Progressives: heading into the 19th century at full steam!
See I always thought Atlas Shrugged was goofy for its obsession with trains, but the state just keeps managing to let me down.
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Yep. Here's a good discussion of how terrible this is from someone who likes trains, but wants spending done smart.
Amtrak is spending a ton of money on very custom trains that it won't be able to use. (Very high top speeds plus lots of tilt!) It's ridiculous because the only way to justify the super high top speed would be a lot of track work that's not going to happen in the lifetime of these trains. It would make more sense to get off the shelf European (or Japanese) trains and save a ton of money.
American transit at all levels is rampant with overengineering and of course political decision-making. People's needs are somewhere near the bottom of the list of considerations.
With the speed limit there ? 215 km/h ? and acceleration/deceleration time, Amtrak is spending 2.4B USD to shave less than a minute (I'm thinking it's going to be 30 seconds or less!) off the run.
Damn. Time must be pretty damn valuable up there.
But it will let some east coast Progressives salve their wounded "but we're not Europe" fixation, and isn't that all that matters?
It's only other people's money, after all.
Do some research please. 1. A 50 mile stretch of track from New Brunswick to Trenton is currently under renovation and will be available to 165 mph service next year. 2. A 35 mile stretch of track from Baltimore to Capital beltway is set for improvement as part of the package announced with the purchase of the new trains. If you had talked to anyone at Amtrak you would have learned that information.
All right, we stand corrected. Amtrak's not spending twenty-four-hundred-million dollars to shave 30 seconds off the trip. They're spending twenty-four-hundred-million dollars to shave 3 minutes off the trip.
Happy?
Do some research please. 1. A 50 mile stretch of track from New Brunswick to Trenton is currently under renovation and will be available to 165 mph service next year. 2. A 35 mile stretch of track from Baltimore to Capital beltway is set for improvement as part of the package announced with the purchase of the new trains. If you had talked to anyone at Amtrak you would have learned that information.
Not mentioned in the article is the fact that freight trains have priority over passenger trains. Passenger trains have to pull over onto sidings to allow freight trains through. Amtrak has a route called the Southern Crescent which runs from New Orleans to New York. It is routinely 1 1/2 hours delayed because of freight trains. The new Acela cars won't change that inconvenient fact.
These cars won't achieve any appreciable savings in time; they are simply expensive new toys for the taxpayers to subsidize. Amtrak should be privatized and allowed to sink or swim on its own merits (it would rapidly sink; it hasn't broken even since its creation in the 1970s). But that won't be allowed to happen because of politics: too many people and too many powerful politicians in the northeast corridor.
Don't dare them. They'll do it just to prove you wrong.
Another Amtrak injustice: it demands that passengers identify themselves. For this reason, I always take the bus.
Such a weird spending way of spending the budget money. By the way, if look for something or someone to help you out with writing your term paper, then I'll be able to help you out. There exists MyEssayWritingHelp, where you can find the list of top writing services of our country. You'll get a professional essay writers help online that would write you the best assignment. Just click the link above you'll get into one of the most demanded and most professional companies that specialize themselves in this business. We offer our customers only best deals!
I think it's pretty obvious I didn't.
Nice link. I'll repay with a different link, CPI, 1800-2005. I like the little inflation-deflation wartime bumps, how the deflation was checked after WW I by the new Fed (and worse actions prevented because Woodrow Wilson was incapacitated and the ship of state was rudderless), and how up til WW I, prices were incredibly stable for the Fed-less system that so many progressives fear.
I think the better inflection points are the removal of the dollar from the gold and silver standards. Imagine that. When you rope your currency to a set amount of tangible assets, its harder to manipulate.