Everything about Transport In The United Kingdom totally explained
The transport systems in the
United Kingdom are the responsibility of each individual country: The UK
Department for Transport is the
government department responsible for the English
transport network (as well as transport matters in
Scotland,
Wales and
Northern Ireland which are not devolved.) In Scotland, the
Scottish Government's Enterprise, Transport and Lifelong Learning Department is responsible for the Scottish
transport network with
Transport Scotland being the
Executive Agency that's accountable to the
Cabinet Secretary for Finance and Sustainable Growth. For details about transport in each country, see;
Overall, UK transport systems are well developed. A radial road network of 29,145 miles (46,632 km) of main roads is centred on
London,
Edinburgh and
Belfast, whilst, in
Great Britain, a motorway network of 2,173 miles (3,477 km) is centred on
Birmingham,
Leeds,
Liverpool,
Manchester and London. There are a further 213,750 miles (342,000 km) of paved roads. The
National Rail network of 10,072 route miles (16,116 route km) in Great Britain and 189 route miles (303 route km) in
Northern Ireland carries over 18,000 passenger and 1,000 freight trains daily. Urban rail networks are also well developed in London and several other cities.
Heathrow Airport is the world's busiest international
airport, and the UK has a considerable network of ports which received over 558 million tonnes of goods in 2003-04.
Transport trends
Since 1952 (the earliest date for which comparable figures are available), the UK has seen a dramatic growth of car use, increasing its modal share, while the use of buses has significantly declined, and railway use has grown more slowly. show that total passenger travel inside the UK has risen from 403 billion passenger kilometres in 1970 to 797 billion in 2004.
Freight transport has undergone similar changes, greatly increasing in volume and shifting from railways onto the road. In 1953 89 bn tonne kilometres of goods were moved, with rail accounting for 42%, road 36% and water 22%. By 2002 the volume of freight moved had almost trebled to 254 bn tonne kilometres, of which 7.5% was moved by rail, 26% by water, 4% by pipeline and 62% by road.
This shift from rail to road is both caused by, and a cause of, changes in the relative sizes of their networks; wheareas the rail network has halved from 31,336 km in 1950 to 16,116 km today, the motorway network, which today is 3476 km long, didn't exist in 1950. It has also been caused by rising economic affluence, the move of the population away from city centres, and changes in industry.
In 2008, the
Department for Transport stated that
traffic congestion is one of the most serious transport problems facing the UK. According to the government-sponsored
Eddington report of 2006, bottleneck roads are in serious danger of becoming so congested that it may damage the economy.
Railways
» Main articles: Rail transport in Great Britain, Rail transport in Ireland, Rapid transit in the United Kingdom
The rail network in the United Kingdom consists of two independent parts, that of
Northern Ireland and that of
Great Britain. Since 1994, the latter has been connected to
mainland Europe via the
Channel Tunnel. The network of Northern Ireland is connected to that of the
Republic of Ireland. The
National Rail network of 10,072 miles in Great Britain and 189 route miles (303 route km) in
Northern Ireland carries over 18,000 passenger trains and 1,000 freight trains daily. Urban rail networks are also well developed in London and several other cities. There was once over of rail network in the U.K., however most of this was reduced over a time period from 1955 to 1975, much of it after a report by a government advisor
Richard Beeching in the mid 1960s (known as the
Beeching Axe).
Great Britain
The rail network in Great Britain is the oldest such network in the world. The system consists of five high-speed main lines (the
West Coast,
East Coast,
Midland,
Great Western and
Great Eastern), which radiate from London to the rest of the country, augmented by regional rail lines and dense commuter networks within the major cities.
High Speed 1 is operationally separate from the rest of the network, and is built to the same standard as the
TGV system in France.
The world's first intercity railway was the
Liverpool and Manchester Railway, designed by
George Stephenson and opened by the
Prime Minister, the
Duke of Wellington on
15 September 1830. The network grew rapidly as a patchwork of literally hundreds of separate companies during the
Victorian era, which eventually was consolidated into just four by 1922, as the boom in railways ended and they began to lose money. Eventually the entire system came under state control in 1948 under
British Rail, and the network was reduced to less than half of its original size by the infamous
Beeching cuts of the 1960s when many unprofitable branch lines were closed.
In 1994 and 1995, British Rail was split into infrastructure, maintenance, rolling stock, passenger and freight companies, which were
privatised from 1996 to 1997. The privatisation has delivered mixed results with healthy passenger growth, mass refurbishment of infrastructure and investment in new rolling stock being offset by concerns over safety, punctuality, network capacity and the overall cost to the taxpayer.
In Britain, the infrastructure (track, stations, depots and signalling chiefly) is owned and maintained by
Network Rail, a
not for profit company. Network Rail replaced
Railtrack, which became bankrupt in 2002 following the
Hatfield rail crash in 2000. Passenger services are operated by
train operating companies (TOCs), most of which are franchises awarded by the UK Government. Examples include
First Group,
National Express East Coast and
Virgin Trains. Freight trains are operated by Freight Operating Companies, such as
EWS, which are commercial operations unsupported by government. Most Train Operating Companies don't own the locomotives and coaches that they use to operate passenger services. Instead, they're required to lease these from the three
Rolling Stock Operating Companies (ROSCO’s), with train maintenance carried out by companies such as
Bombardier and
Alstom.
In
Great Britain there's 16,536 km of 1435
mm gauge track. 4,928 km of track is electrified and 12,591 km is double or multiple tracks. The maximum scheduled speed on the regular network has historically been around 125
miles per hour (200 km/h) on the
InterCity lines. On
High Speed 1, trains are now able to reach the speeds of French
TGVs.
There was once over 30,000 route mile of rail network in the U.K., however this was reduced by two-thirds (to now), during successive administrations.
Northern Ireland
In Northern Ireland,
Northern Ireland Railways (NIR) both owns the infrastructure and operates passenger rail services. The Northern Ireland rail network is one of the few networks in Europe that carry no freight. It is publicly owned. NIR was united in 1996 with Northern Ireland's two publicly owned bus operators —
Ulsterbus and Metro (formally
Citybus) — under the brand
Translink.
In
Northern Ireland there's 342 km of track at 1600 mm
gauge. 190 km of it's multiple track.
Rapid transit
Three cities in the UK have
rapid transit systems. Most well known is the
London Underground (commonly known as the Tube), the oldest and longest rapid transit system in the world. Also in
London are the separate
Docklands Light Railway (though this is integrated with the Underground in many ways), and the
North London Line, operated by
Silverlink (formerly by
British Rail). Outside of London there's the
Glasgow Subway and the
Tyne and Wear Metro.
However, many other cities in the UK have rapid transit systems combined of local or light rail with bus and tram systems.
Trams and Light Rail
Tram systems were popular in the UK in the late 19th and early 20th century. However with the rise of the
car they began to be widely dismantled in the 1950s. By 1962 only the
Blackpool tramway and the
Glasgow Corporation Tramways remained; the final Glasgow service was withdrawn on
2 September 1962.
Recent years have have seen a revival the UK, as in other countries, of trams together with light rail systems. Examples of these second generation of tram and light rail systems include:
Docklands Light Railway in East London
Manchester Metrolink in Greater Manchester
Sheffield Supertram in Sheffield
Midland Metro in the West Midlands
Tramlink in Croydon
NET in Nottingham
Edinburgh Tram Network (currently under construction)
Merseytram in Merseyside (planned, but currently suspended)
Roads
The road network in Great Britain, in 2006, comprised of: 12,226 km of trunk roads (including 3,503 km of motorway), 38,085 km of principal roads (including 55 km of motorway), 114,657 km of "B" and "C" roads, and 233,383 km of unclassified roads (mainly local streets and access roads)—totalling 398,350 km.
Road is the most popular method of transportation in the UK, carrying over 90% of motorised passenger travel and 65% of domestic freight. They give comparative figures for a selection of nations of (units = km/million population): Luxembourg 280, Spain 225, Austria 200, France 185, Belgium 165, Denmark 165, Sweden 165, Netherlands 140, Italy 115, Finland 100, Germany 140, Portugal 80, United Kingdom 60, Greece 45 and Ireland 30. Northern Ireland's roads are overseen by the Roads Service Northern Ireland, a section of the Department for Regional Development. Rod Eddington, in his 2006 Transport’s role in sustaining the UK’s productivity and competitiveness report, recommended that the congestion problem should be tackled with a "sophisticated policy mix" of congestion-targeted road pricing and improving the capacity and performance of the transport network through infrastructure investment and better use of the existing network. Congestion charging systems do operate in the cities of London and Durham. In 2005, the Government published proposals for a UK wide road pricing scheme. This was designed to be revenue neutral with other motoring taxes to be reduced to compensate. The plans have been extremely controversial with 1.8 million people signing a petition against them.
Driving is on the left. The maximum speed limit is 70 miles per hour (113 km/h) on motorways and dual carriages.
Road passenger transport
Buses
Local bus services cover the whole country. Since deregulation the majority (80% by the late 1990s (External Link
)) of these local bus companies have been taken over by one of the "Big Five" private transport companies: Arriva, First Group, Go-Ahead Group, National Express Group (owners of National Express) and Stagecoach Group. In Northern Ireland coach, bus (and rail) services remain state-owned and are provided by Translink.
Coaches
Coaches provide long-distance links throughout the UK: in England & Wales the majority of coach services are provided by National Express. Megabus run no-frills coach services in competition with National Express and services in Scotland in co-operation with Scottish Citylink.
Water
Due to the United Kingdom's island nature, before the Channel Tunnel and the advent of air travel the only way to enter or leave the country was on water, except at the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
Ports and harbours
Approximately 95% of freight enters the UK by sea (75% by value). Three major ports handle most freight traffic:
Port of Felixstowe on the east coast - the fourth largest seaport in Europe.
Tilbury, near London.
Southampton on the south coast.
There are many other ports and harbours around the UK, including the following towns and cities:
Aberdeen, Avonmouth, Barry, Belfast, Cardiff, Dover, Falmouth, Glasgow, Gloucester, Grangemouth, Harwich, Holyhead, Hull, Kirkwall, Leith, Liverpool, London, Manchester, Milford Haven, Peterhead, Plymouth, Poole, Port Talbot, Portsmouth, Scapa Flow, Sullom Voe, Swansea, Tees, Tyne.
Merchant marine
For long periods of the last millennium Britain had the largest merchant fleet in the world, but it has slipped down the rankings. There are 429 ships of or over, making a total of . These are split into the following types: bulk carrier 18, cargo ship 55, chemical tanker 48, container ship 134, liquefied gas 11, passenger ship 12, passenger/cargo ship 64, petroleum tanker 40, refrigerated cargo ship 19, roll-on/roll-off 25, vehicle carrier 3. There are also 446 ships registered in other countries, and 202 foreign-owned ships registered in the UK. (2005 CIA estimate)
Other shipping
Passenger ferries operate internationally to nearby countries such as France, the Republic of Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Spain and Norway. Ferries also operate within the UK, connecting Scotland with Northern Ireland, Southampton with Isle of Wight and many smaller routes.
Cruise ships depart from the UK for destinations worldwide, many heading for ports around the Mediterranean and Caribbean.
The Solent is a world centre for yachting and home to largest number of private yachts in the world.
Inland waterways
Major canal building began in the UK after the onset of the Industrial revolution in the 18th century. A large canal network was built and it became the primary method of transporting goods throughout the country. However, by the 1830s with the development of the railways the canal network began to go into decline.
There are currently 1,988 miles (3200 km) of waterways in the United Kingdom, and the primary use is recreational. 385 miles (620 km) is used for commerce. (2004 CIA estimate)
Air transport
See also: Busiest airports in the United Kingdom by total passenger traffic
There are 471 airports in the UK, of which 334 are paved. There are also 11 heliports. (2004 CIA estimates)
BAA is the UK's largest airport operator, its flagship being London Heathrow Airport, the largest traffic volume international airport in Europe and one of the world's busiest airports, and London Gatwick Airport, the second largest. The third largest is Manchester Airport, in Manchester, which is run by Manchester Airport Group, which also owns various other airports.
Other major airports include London Stansted Airport in Essex, about thirty miles (50 km) north of London and Birmingham International Airport, in Solihull.
Outside of England,Cardiff International Airport, Glasgow International Airport and Belfast International Airport, are the busiest airports serving Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland respectively.
The largest airline in the UK is British Airways, who operate long-distance flights from the UK to all over the globe. Others include bmi, bmibaby, easyJet, Flybe and Virgin Atlantic.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Transport In The United Kingdom'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://transport_in_the_united_kingdom.totallyexplained.com">Transport in the United Kingdom Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |