A few days ago it was announced that Stadler has won the contract to supply new long distance trains to Norway. The official press release from Norske Tog in Norwegian is here, and there are articles from IRJ and Global Railway Review in English as well. While this tender only concerns trains for use in Norway, there are a bunch of aspects of the tender and the winning bid that have relevance for the rest of Europe to justify a some detailed analysis.
First, the shipment times. A firm order for 17 8-carriage trains has been agreed now, and the framework contract covers delivery of up to 100 trains. The first trains are to be delivered to Norway in 2025 – so three years from now – and are to run in 2026 (Global Railway Review) or 2027 (Norske Tog) – I presume this means from the mid-December 2026 timetable change. That is three years and nine months from now. And that for a semi-bespoke design of train. Sure, Stadler has delivered trains to Norway before – but with a carriage and wheel layout very different to the one in the rendering shown to win this tender.
I repeatedly hear that were a night train operator to make an order for new trains, the earliest they could run – even simple carriages to be hauled by a locomotive! – would be five years from now. And here is Stadler promising a semi-bespoke EMU design to be ready in less than four years. That’s radical.
Second, the interior design.
These trains are to have a kind of convertible day-night design – although working out how this is going to work exactly needs a bit of educated guessing from the renderings provided by Stadler and included in Norske Tog’s press release.
There are to be reclining seats – in what looks like a 2+1 arrangement in open carriages:
And compartments, shown here in night time formation – but you can observe headrests too – so the beds will fold, and relatively traditional compartment accommodation will be provided – this would seem to show 4 beds per compartment, and either 4 or 6 seats per compartment in daytime formation:
The press release says “There will be a wider range of sleeping options, including reclining seats, 2-bed compartments and 4-bed compartments. The sleeping compartments will be converted into closed seating areas for families and business travellers during the day, and the reclining seats will be available 24 hours a day.”
So despite all the pastel tones and neat renderings, this leaves me rather underwhelmed as to how this is going to be in the nighttime. Open carriages – when passengers are moving around, and a train is passing through brightly lit stations – have never been a winner for me at night. And there is nothing like the innovation of ÖBB’s mini compartments from the new NightJet designs here.
That brings me to the third point – capacity.
These new trains each with 8 carriages are – according to Norske Tog – to have a capacity of “up to 542 seats per train”. That looks… optimistic. Other 8 carriage, distributed traction designs have much lower capacity – a DB ICE 3 (class 403) has 441 seats, and a Trenitalia Frecciarossa 1000 has 457. All of these designs – including the new Stadler trains for Norway – have a dining car in the composition.
So how, I wonder, is Stadler going to cram in a hundred more seats than a ICE3 and eighty more than a Frecciarossa? OK, these trains have fewer doors, but is that enough? And yes, the loading gauge in Norway is wider than in Germany or Italy, so a 3+2 seating arrangement in at least some of the train might be possible (but that’s absent from both the renderings and the press release), but compartments generally have a lower capacity than open carriages. It strikes me that something is not altogether right with the numbers here.
Related is the fourth point – flexibility.
These trains will have fixed 8 carriage formations. Theoretically a double set could be run – so 16 carriages – but I am pretty sure no stations in Norway other than Oslo S have 400 metre platforms. Perhaps simply running a more dense timetable in the busier winter and summer months, and a thinner timetable off season in spring and autumn, is the solution here. But these trains are less flexible to operate than the locomotive hauled trains on the Bergen line they will replace.
The fifth point is the enigma about traction.