KOBUCHIZAWA, Japan - It seems an unlikely venue for a potential revolution in public transport - a sleepy town in the lush, pine-carpeted mountains of rural Japan. But this is where travellers began paying yesterday to board the world's first hybrid train service.
The brightly coloured Hybrid Train E200 pulled quietly out of the station carrying about 100 passengers. It was waved off by cheering schoolchildren, a crew of traditional Taiko drummers and several ecstatic trainspotters.
Mikihiro Kobayashi, a 27-year-old engineer who took the day off work to see the E200's debut, said: "I love trains and wanted to check this one out for myself. I hope Japan exports it because the environment is becoming a big issue around the world."
Looking like a slightly sleeker version of the mechanical warhorses that ferry millions of Japanese to work and school every day, the train might pass unnoticed by the keenest trainspotter. But inside it is quieter than a conventional train, thanks to a battery-powered motor that powers it at low speeds.
Screens in each carriage give all the detail any passenger could want. Designed and run by the transport giantJapan Rail (JR), each 180-million-yen train is powered by a super fuel-efficient diesel engine and lithium-ion batteries that recharge every time the brakes are applied, a system that cuts power, noise and emissions by up to 60 per cent.
Kenji Motate, of JR East, said: "We're very proud of it. This is a very beautiful area so it is fitting that a train so kind to the environment is debuting here."
The clean-energy prototype will hum its way between picturesque Yamanashi and Nagano Prefectures in central Japan, a hikers' paradise where the revolutionary engine can be tested on all the hills. In the summer the line is packed with families on day trips and in winter it ferries people to ski resorts whose managers are increasingly alarmed by a lack of snow in the warming climate.
Mineko Yamaguchi, a pensioner, said: "I've been riding this line for 40 years, so when I heard about this train I took my two grandchildren along to show them. I'm teaching them about the beauty of the natural environment." Her grandson, six-year-old Ayase, said the train was "cool" and promised to tell his friends about it.
Japan is a world leader in the development of hybrid cars and low-emission buses and plans are already well advanced to run a hybrid tram in Tokyo. But a JR spokesman said it was "too early" to contemplate selling the E200 on the open market. "We're still trying to modify and improve its performance," he said. JR said that it wanted to make the E200 10 per cent more fuel efficient than conventional trains, but admitted that compared to standard diesel trains, its current prototype was expensive.
"We think it is inevitable that we will have to spend money if we are going to save the environment," the spokesman said.
© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
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7 Comments so far
Show AllTo PJD and masm:
Overhead catenary lines lose a lot of energy to resistance, and also require a great deal more maintenance for the infrastructure.
Other than the efficiency of the E200's diesel power plant, the most important difference between it and a standard diesel-electric is the ability to recapture energy through regenerative braking and store it in the batteries. It's actually a very logical extension of hybrid technology.
Whaaat? 8 years living in Japan and one of the most impressive things there was the ELECTRIC train system, with overhead lines. This sounds like a step in the wrong direction...away from the fabulous electric system of trains.
Leonardo DiCaprio’s “The 11th Hour†is a feature length documentary
concerning the environmental crises caused by human actions and their
impact on the planet. However, the most powerful element of “The 11th Hour†is not a portrait of a planet in crisis, but the offering of hope and solutions - like better hybrids, electric cars and other completely new/alternative modes of transportation all together!
One of my favorite quotes from the film is from architect & designer William McDonough who says, "We have to imagine what it would be like to re-design, design itself."
“The 11th Hour†calls for a future now within our grasp that is both sustainable and healthier…
Join in the action: www.11thhouraction.com
Go see the 11th Hour, its out in theaters beginning August 17th!!!
High speed trains are great! It's a shame that Americans are exploited like cattle. Instead of thousands driving and burning fuel, most of them could be reading and relaxing while traveling and only a few driving.
=================
· Transportation systems will be devised which will be so silent, so apparently motionless, that travel fatigue will completely disappear.
· The growing concern for nature and environment will be embodied in legislation, universally accepted, and will lead to a wise husbandry of nature's gifts.
· There will be a new reverence for all manifestations of life...
· Most farming will be organically based. This will enhance the vitality and health of the people.
· A much simpler style of living will distinguish the coming civilization.
· Humanity will be emancipated from the drudgery of needless work. Machines will gradually take over the tasks of manufacture.
· Increased leisure will evoke undreamed-of skills and talents, allow men and women to reach their full potential, and permit close involvement in community and national life.
above is an excerpt from-
Benjamin Creme on the future:
http://snipurl.com/1p228
---------------
"...mankind [will advance] into a civilization and a state of consciousness in which right human relations and worldwide cooperation for the good of all will be the universal keynote." DK
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!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Prepare your mind for the future:
http://www.Share-International.org
Ralph and Jerry talked about high speed trains coast to coast. No one listened.
a system that cuts power, noise and emissions by up to 60 per cent.
We spend most of our research money on bombs and technology to remotely kill people anywhere in the world.
What kind of gimmick is this? Just a regular diesel-electric locomotive with some batteries added? Why not just install overhead catenary lines and run regular electric locomotives?