Caltrain Plan Suggests Potential for up to 300 Percent Increase in Demand by 2040

As work continues on the development of the Caltrain Business Plan, projections of potential future demand show that by 2040 as many as 250,000 customers would want to ride the train if service were frequent and abundant - a nearly 300 percent increase over the number of passengers carried by the system today.

An update on the development of the Business Plan provided to the Caltrain Board of Directors shows that significantly increased Caltrain service could capture ridership demand that increases from 65,000 daily riders in 2018, to 243,000 daily riders in 2040. The projections were part of an unconstrained assessment of the market for rail service along the Caltrain corridor. Over the coming months, the Business Plan will analyze the choices the railroad will face as it considers options for growing service to meet this expanded demand.   

The Business Plan will be completed with input from communities along the corridor through monthly and public meetings, and is anticipated to be a year-long process.

Electrification of the Caltrain system is currently underway, and creates the potential for increased service levels and enhanced frequency. When the Business Plan is complete next year, it will include a Service Vision that details how the system will grow over time, taking advantage of the potential that an electrified system provides. 

Over the last 10 years, Caltrain has seen unprecedented ridership growth at an average of 6 percent per year and even before the Business Plan is complete, Caltrain is taking steps to increase capacity to accommodate current and future demand. The Board reviewed plans to invest recently approved state gas tax revenues in the purchase of 37 new electric train cars. Electric trains, already in production, are set to replace 75 percent of the system’s current diesel fleet. The 37 additional cars will allow the system to replace more diesel trains and extend the electric trains from six cars to seven cars.

Electric trains are planned to begin operation in 2022. 

Background

The Business Plan’s strategy and scope, which was approved by the Joint Powers Board (JPB) in February, will define the long-term vision for the fast-growing commuter rail system that connects San Francisco and Silicon Valley. The JPB is collaborating with policymakers, stakeholders, Caltrain riders, and community members to make sure the Caltrain Business Plan considers everyone’s needs.

The Caltrain Business Plan will allow the railway to identify a service model that supports long-term regional job and population growth, and surging ridership demand. This work will involve an exploration of economic, policy and technical approaches that will provide a better understanding of passenger needs and opportunities to maximize the value of Caltrain for local communities.

The Caltrain Business Plan will also look at long-range opportunities to integrate regional rail services that could traverse and connect to the Caltrain corridor. The final Business Plan will include specific targets for service and capacity growth that will describe how Caltrain should grow to meet market demand.

Work on the Caltrain Business Plan began in 2017 after the agency awarded contracts for construction of the Caltrain Electrification project that allows the system to replace decades-old diesel equipment with modernized electric trains. When complete, Caltrain Electrification will immediately improve the system’s capacity, service frequency and travel times, but the strategies recommended in the final Business Plan will need to be implemented to fully realize the benefits that electrification makes possible.

 

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About Caltrain: Owned and operated by the Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board, Caltrain provides commuter rail service from San Francisco to San Jose, with limited commute service to Gilroy. Caltrain enjoyed five years of consecutive monthly ridership increases, surpassing more than 65,000 average weekday riders. While the Joint Powers Board assumed operating responsibilities for the service in 1992, the railroad celebrated 150 years of continuous passenger service in 2014. Planning for the next 150 years of Peninsula rail service, Caltrain is on pace to electrify the system, reduce diesel emissions by 97 percent by 2040 and add more service to more stations.

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