In many cities across the world, battery-powered trams and twin-source trolley busses have become quite commonplace. The main advantage of this configuration is obvious – the vehicle is not limited to streets where there is an overhead line. Applying the same principle on trains, the so-called battery electric multiple units, or BEMUs, can reduce the number of changes that passengers have to make when travelling on lines that are partly electrified and non-electrified. Thanks to their versatility, the operator may need less units in service, not to mention that BEMUs are the cleanest solution to replace diesel vehicles.
On and off the grid
Experiments with accumulator railcars, as they were originally called, were conducted from around 1890 in several European countries and the US. However, apart from a number of metro networks around the world, battery-electric trains remained a niche technology. Until a decade or so ago when improvements in battery technology led to a significant reduction in weight of the storage, increasing the trains' ranges. Only this time, instead of lead-acid batteries or various nickel-based chemistries, lithium-ion is the choice of the day.
The most common BEMU configuration is the batteries being continuously recharged by driving under traction and by energy recovery during so-called regenerative breaking. Modern units, such as the respective variants of Siemens Desiro, Stadler Flirt or Škoda Transportation’s RegioPanter, have a battery-only range of around 100 km, but some even up to 150 km, which is more than enough to cover regional non-electrified lines. Several BEMUs have been in test service since the late 2010s, with the first such train to reach full homologation for regional passenger transport in the EU in 2021.