UK Ramps Up Intercity Rail Investments
from the Transport Politic blog:
UK Ramps Up Intercity Rail Investments
Opposition to the United Kingdoms second high-speed rail line, the £33 billion connection between London and Birmingham called HS2, has been stewing for years. Critics of the line much like opponents to rail programs in the U.S. suggest that the projects benefits do not justify its enormous cost (both monetarily and in terms of its effects on the rural landscapes trains will pass through) and that other investments on existing lines would be more effective.
While the U.K.s Conservative-led coalition government, itself teetering and facing a double-dip recession, continues to maintain its support for the HS2 program, it has not limited its public investments just to that line, and this week it announced a £9.4 billion ($14.6 billion) scheme to electrify a number of routes throughout the country between 2014 and 2019. Certain of these projects were announced in 2009 under the then-Labour government. The improvements will provide for a significant expansion in capacity on existing lines, decrease operating costs, and allow the introduction of faster, more agile electric trains in addition to clearing the way for more space for freight trains.
The spending, which will electrify routes from London to Cardiff, Manchester to Liverpool and York, and the Midland Main Line, is part of a £16 billion total investment in the National Rail route network planned for the five-year period, whose hallmark projects include the construction or improvement of two cross-London lines, Crossrail and Thameslink. It comes after fifteen years of £35 billion of concentrated investments in the U.K.s rail system spending in tracks, signals, stations and trains that has radically improved service and dramatically increased passenger counts.
[font size="1"]A diesel East Midlands train running north from London on a line scheduled for electrification. From Flickr user Ingy the Wingy (cc)[/font]
Unlike HS2, the planned line electrifications are unlikely to see much opposition, in part because the investments made in the countrys rail network thus far have proven so popular despite their high cost. Though there is quite a bit criticism of the operations regime used in the U.K., in which private operators bid for routes (indeed, Labour is flirting with re-nationalisation), the publicly owned infrastructure has been improved to such an extent that the nation now boasts the second-most heavily used rail network in Europe, after Germany. Last year, 1.35 billion riders took to the rails, an increase of 50% over the past decade. Though Amtraks recent passenger growth has been impressive, its roughly 30 million annual passengers pale in comparison. So there is cross-party support for projects that improve the U.K.s railways. .................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://www.thetransportpolitic.com/2012/07/17/uk-ramps-up-intercity-rail-investments/