London's canal network: opportunity for viable and sustainable freight transport 01-07-2008 During the industrial revolution, the canals of London were used extensively.
However, in the previous century they became very empty. It wasn’t a change in
English eating habits that extinguished the oldest of freight transport modes,
but rather containerisation and the development of road based logistics and
distribution systems. Nowadays, the canals may seem like a viable alternative
when it comes to freight transport.
London is not alone in having to adjust to the loss of city centre industry
and the shift to containerisation and road based distribution. Capitals and
ports all over the world are redeveloping the vast hearts of their cities where
once were accommodated the docks and wharves that fed their economies. To gauge
the scale of the decline in water transport you only have to visit MIPIM, the
annual international property conference in Cannes. Here are showcased massive
redevelopment schemes from Ireland to Greece, all located on sites that once
relied on water transport.
In London, and no doubt other former ports in the western economies, the
socio-economic impact of the collapse of inland water transport can be seen in
the remarkably strong correlation between the waterways and deprivation. This
relationship reflects the former employment of communities, particularly in East
London, in the Docks, in water carriage generally and in water accessed
industries.
Not surprisingly, there is an equally strong relationship between the
waterways and development opportunity. Analysis shows that 76 per cent of the
land in the areas of ‘opportunity and intensification’ identified by the London
Plan, the spatial development strategy for the capital, is accessible from the
waterway network. This reflects the former use of these now brownfield sites.
This land is set to accommodate 80 per cent of all the new workspace and 71 per
cent of all the new homes that are targeted for the development areas.
This presents a tremendous opportunity for the waterways to carry
construction materials and waste to and from these sites during their
development phase and later waste and recyclates away. This would help make the
developments more sustainable by reducing their road use with all its
consequences of congestion, accidents and pollution.
Shifting heavy lorry movements to waterways can reduce accidents, cut carbon
emissions by 75 per cent, and improve the quality of life. Compared to lorries,
barges use less than a third of the fuel per tonne of cargo and can carry more
than five times as much payload (depending on the dimensions of the particular
waterway). Increased barge traffic brings natural surveillance to routes
perceived as unsafe for people walking or cycling along the waterways.
But until fairly recently, little was done to take advantage of the
opportunities presented by London’s waterway network. Then, in 2000, London
elected its first city-wide mayor. Ken Livingstone was sympathetic to the cause
of waterways. They featured prominently in his London Plan and he promoted
their use for transport, recreation and natural habitat. As road congestion
increased and concern about the impact of carbon emissions on the environment
mounted, water transport became attractive once more.
In 2004, freight traffic on the tidal Thames through the Port of London was
53.3 million tonnes, 11 per cent higher than four years previously. There are
now 50 wharves on the Thames and its tributaries that are safeguarded by the
mayor for water freight cargo-handling. With large tonnage capacities, the
Thames is more economically viable for water freight than the canal network.
But soaring fuel prices, increased road vehicle costs and unreliable lorry
journey times have reached a point where freight traffic on the canal is now
viable.
The capacity of the London canal network is in excess of 10 million tonnes,
equivalent to around two million heavy lorry trips a year. Although this
represents a small percentage of total London road freight, the canal routes
access inner London where the damage, congestion and pollution caused by heavy
vehicles is at its greatest. Were the canal network to be used to capacity it
could rival the quantities of freight currently carried on the rail network.
The results of the 2004 mayoral elections left Livingstone dependent on
support from Green Party assembly members to get his budget through. Jenny
Jones, one of the Greens and a canal enthusiast, struck a deal to get money
spent on canal infrastructure. The mayor funded some dredging of London’s canals
and helped pay for the construction of a new wharf on the Grand Union canal in
west London. There has also been investment in the development of a multi-modal
refuse vehicle that can be used to collect municipal waste in containers which
can be transferred to barges or rail wagons, along with a new type of skip
carrying barge.
Over the last few years barges out to the west of London have been moving
50,000 tonnes of sand and gravel a year. Now, some major developments such as
the Olympics, Crossrail - the new underground railway through London, and the
King’s Cross railway lands redevelopment are seriously investigating the
movements of large quantities of materials by water. Two other big
infrastructure tunnelling projects for sewerage and electricity challenge
London’s capacity to shift and recycle enormous tonnages of materials. These too
will need to use water transport if they are to avoid causing major congestion
in the capital.
Source: City Mayors LinksClick here to read the full article "London’s canal network: opportunity for viable and sustainable freight transport"Click here to visit the website of Transport for London back |


