DynamicSpirit
Established Member
Option 2 is doable, but would require MASSIVE investment in enormous rail terminal capacity across Europe, and indeed rail capacity, a complete rewrite of the European supply chain. This would have to be coordinated across Europe, as it makes no sense to drive from Spain or Italy to Calais, only to then put the container on a train.
Why wouldn't it make sense to drive to Calais and then put the container on the train? If we assume that the infrastructure is in place in the UK to do that, but not in Europe, then you would have the choice of:
1. Drive all the way to your destination in the UK.
2. Drive to Calais. Have the container put on a train (or: onto a ferry at Calais then transferred to a train at Dover). Then somewhere in the UK (Maybe London, or Birmingham or wherever) that's not too far from your final destination, another lorry picks up the container and takes it to wherever you actually want to send it.
Compared to (1), (2) saves you paying for a driver to sit idle on the ferry then spend half a day or more driving from Dover to the other UK train terminal. It also saves you the diesel to do that, and frees up a lorry for that time. Set against that, you have to pay the train and ferry companies to take the container. The latter process clearly uses fewer actual resources and is much less harmful to the environment and quality of life in the UK, so provided the pricing structure reflects that, you'll save money. The challenge of course is that up to now, freight prices don't reflect that (presumably in part because of possible inefficiencies in how rail is set up, and in part because at the moment we're not adequately charging lorries - or road traffic generally - for all the external costs associated with road transport.