Under the Amtrak deal, Siemens will add 200 jobs at its light rail manufacturing plant in Sacramento, California and 50 jobs at plants in Georgia, which will build motors and propulsion containers for the trains. Although the manufacturing process isn’t completely green, the Sacramento plant uses solar energy for up to 80% of its power, according to Siemens’ press release. The first trains will hit the track in 2013.
The trains themselves, called Amtrack Cities Sprinters, will be a step up from the average locomotives on the market and will feature a few green highlights. Modeled after the European version, the EuroSprinter, the new trains will be able to travel 125 mph and improve energy efficiency.
“This isn’t your grandfather’s locomotive,” Oliver Hauck, president of Siemens Industry’s Mobility Division, said in a statement. “Not only will we use renewable energy to build them, the locomotives will also include energy efficient features, such as regenerative braking that can feed up to 100 percent of the energy generated during braking back to the power grid.” A feature which will also reduce wear on the breaks. More efficient breaks will not reinvent the green wheel of the industry, but it’s certainly an incremental gain.
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Authors: Evelyn Rusli