Rail (UK)

Analysis

JIM STEER, Director at Greengauge 21 examines the National Infrastruc­ture Commission’s Rail Needs for the Midlands and the North report

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Rail connectivi­ty and levelling up.

IN June 2014, in Manchester, the leaders of six northern cities pitched their aspiration­s for better rail inter-connection­s to the wider world.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer was on hand to say that “the money will be found”. The new buzzword, courtesy of Lord

Jim O’Neil, was the ‘Northern Powerhouse’. And Transport for the North (Tfn) set out to work up a suitable investment proposal for its new rail connection­s.

As it became clear that this entailed, in effect, a high-speed line from Liverpool to York, at a cost now estimated at £39 billion, northern politician­s were often asked: which is the priority - Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR) or the northern parts of HS2 (Phase 2)?

“We want both,” came the reply. “The M62 needs the M1 and vice-versa. And the same is true for rail.”

Under Dft guidance, so-called ‘touch-points’ were examined - places where the northern (and indeed midland) sections of HS2 could join the existing network or NPR. But the premise was based on an assumption that HS2 would proceed first, with connection­s safeguarde­d for later installati­on. Realists recognised that ‘later’ meant the 2040s.

For Tfn, it wasn’t even a question of ‘levelling up’ initially. For a while, it insisted that NPR was being progressed in ‘lock step’ with London’s Crossrail 2 - unwisely, it turns out, with Crossrail 2 developmen­t now on ice.

So, should the same happen with NPR? This becomes the next pertinent, if chilling, question. And one that nobody has answered - until now.

Step forward the National Infrastruc­ture Commission (NIC), which on December 15 2020 published its advice to Government on the Rail Needs for the Midlands and the North, a key feed into the Integrated Rail Plan to be drafted by Dft ( RAIL 921).

Having consulted widely, we might have expected some clarity around budget from the NIC - and the report doesn’t disappoint.

Even if the ceiling set for economic capital spend is uplifted by 50%, the full hand of rail investment­s - including HS2,

NPR and Midlands Engine Rail

- is unaffordab­le. At the other end of the scale, simply relying on upgrades to existing lines is judged insufficie­nt to ‘level up’ the Northern and Midland economies.

But its most telling conclusion is this: on balance, budget spent on improving regional connectivi­ty delivers a better economic return than spend on longer-distance connectivi­ty.

NIC Chairman Sir John Armitt, speaking at a London First event the day after publicatio­n, said that the western leg of HS2 (into Manchester) and Birmingham-East Midlands (a modified version of the current HS2 line) were the immediate priorities, followed by trans-Pennine investment­s, the Midland Main Line upgrade (and electrific­ation), and East Coast Main Line improvemen­ts. HS2 East Midlands-Leeds comes only after these more valuable measures, although that should not prevent developmen­t work continuing in the meantime.

Connecting places within the North and within the Midlands is more valuable than better connection­s with London.

The fiscal remit

The NIC runs under a mandate to contain gross public investment in economic infrastruc­ture to no more than 1.0%-1.2% of GDP over the period 2010-50 (its ‘binding fiscal remit’).

It says that a strategic case could be made to increase this figure, but counsels against doing so at the expense of other already identified priorities, including a much-needed £5bn injection into urban transport (it cites Leeds as being the largest European city without a single metro/LRT line).

It would certainly be worth testing if cash returns to the Treasury (such as those that could be received soon after opening new high-speed lines, based on the successful precedent of concession­ing HS1) score as a valid offset to Treasury cash outlays.

There is a precedent: the sale of Railtrack in the 1990s was scored in the rail expenditur­e budget of the year it was privatised.

Strategic planning

In fact, the NIC report goes a lot further than many were expecting. It is a serious attempt at asking which candidate rail investment­s deliver most in terms of the Government’s levelling up agenda.

And it hasn’t just accepted the

schemes under considerat­ion as being the best available. Where necessary, it has put forward viable alternativ­es that would fit the bill better. This is a serious piece of strategic planning - and not before time, too.

The NIC report rises above wish lists, asking instead what the priorities are and assessing options against its budget cap (£86bn) as well as at +25% and +50% funding levels (£108bn and £129bn respective­ly). The task of preparing the Integrated Rail Plan just took a major step forward.

Having set out four specific ways in which rail can help to support and stimulate economic growth, the NIC calls for an ‘adaptive plan’ - a programme that can be adjusted going forward.

It suggests that investment is most valuable where the existing network is capacity constraine­d. Although it doesn’t highlight this point, the rail network between the East Midlands and Yorkshire, through which HS2’s eastern leg would be added, is not as congested as other railway geographie­s. And in following the line of the M1 motorway, it raises serious questions of significan­t disruption not to rail users, but to M1 users, as Highways England has pointed out.

Moreover, HS2 as planned manages to bypass Nottingham, Derby and Sheffield - a weakness that the NIC addresses directly with its support for a re-defined southern part of the Eastern leg connecting into the Midland

Main Line at East Midlands Parkway. Cutting Nottingham­Birmingham journey times from 72 minutes to 27 minutes is indeed transforma­tional.

The NIC wants to see the plan as part of a wider strategy that also includes urban transport. It sees a need to invest in key city centre stations (Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham and Sheffield all feature).

This overcomes a weakness of current HS2 and NPR plans across the North. Service enhancemen­ts will only work if these key city centre stations are updated and expanded. Leeds station, the NIC says, will run out of capacity (based on pre-COVID trends) by 2026.

On COVID-19, the report says that the need to travel between and into our cities (and towns) will remain. This, of course, is where rail does better than alternativ­e ways of travelling.

The bigger cities gain most - Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds in all scenarios tested, simply reflecting their scale. As the report also points out, most successful towns are close to successful cities.

On Manchester, the NIC notes there are contrastin­g views between the City Council and DfT over plans for Piccadilly station. It was probably wise not to wade into this issue but having backed the Crewe-Manchester part of HS2 as a priority, this really needs some of the style of the NIC’s thinking to resolve.

The truth is that there has been no assessment of the many factors that need considerat­ion in order to generate the right strategy for the next stage of developmen­t of Manchester’s rail network. Reliance on a four-year-old study to proclaim that only the new

HS2 line can possibly provide the extra capacity into the city will be questioned by informed RAIL readers.

A decision one way or the other on Piccadilly HS2 platforms will still leave many questions unanswered. The NIC was right to question the merit of terminus vs through stations in HS2’s plans. Providing better Liverpool/Preston/ChesterMan­chester-Leeds/Sheffield/ Nottingham/York capability depends on providing through platforms at Piccadilly.

It is hard not to conclude that the NIC has moved thinking on rail several steps forward.

Its focus on upgrades and 140mph operation on the East Coast Main Line neatly sidesteps the possible cut-back in the capacity of HS2’s London arm

(as uncovered in Nigel Harris’s interview with Mark Thurston in RAIL 920).

The report should have looked more at the scope for enhanced long-distance, cross-country services, but this can follow.

 ?? CHRIS MCGEADY. ?? Two types of East Midlands Railway HST sets stand at the country end of Nottingham station on September 14 2020. The train on the left will form the 1245 service to St Pancras Internatio­nal, while the train on the right will depart as empty coaching stock to Sheffield at 1216. The National Infrastruc­ture Commission favours investment in existing city centre stations such as this, which do not lie on the proposed route of HS2 Phase 2b.
CHRIS MCGEADY. Two types of East Midlands Railway HST sets stand at the country end of Nottingham station on September 14 2020. The train on the left will form the 1245 service to St Pancras Internatio­nal, while the train on the right will depart as empty coaching stock to Sheffield at 1216. The National Infrastruc­ture Commission favours investment in existing city centre stations such as this, which do not lie on the proposed route of HS2 Phase 2b.
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