Western Mail

‘Back-tracking on electrific­ation will lengthen journeys’

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SCRAPPING rail electrific­ation projects will lengthen journey times, increase carbon emissions and raise the cost of running the network, the Labour Party has warned.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling announced last month that plans to electrify the Cardiff to Swansea line, and lines in the Midlands and the North have been cancelled or downgraded.

Labour claimed this will put an estimated 19-minute journey time saving from new trains between Swansea and London at risk.

It also will increase the duration of journeys such as between Manchester and Liverpool by nearly half an hour and between Leeds and Newcastle by over 20 minutes, according to the analysis.

Electrific­ation can cut CO2 emissions by 20-30% compared with diesel trains and slash maintenanc­e costs by a third, Labour said.

The party also accused the Government of underminin­g the Crossrail for the North project – boosting east-west rail services in northern England – as the route will not be fully electrifie­d.

Shadow transport secretary Andy McDonald said: “Pulling the plug on electrific­ation shows the Tories’ disregard for Wales and Yorkshire, which will continue to suffer from under-investment, and proves the Midlands Engine and the Northern Powerhouse are just more empty slogans from this Government.

“The Tories are trying to pull the wool over people’s eyes by claiming that diesel bi-mode trains will deliver the same benefits as electrific­ation, despite saying for years that failure to electrify the network costs more in the long run, causes more pollution, worsens air quality, lessens capacity and makes services slower and less reliable.

“Not only will Labour deliver the promised electrific­ation, we will address the imbalance in transport infrastruc­ture spending, committing to building a Crossrail for the North and enhancing and expanding the rail network in order to drive economic growth and re-balance our economy.”

 ??  ?? > Transport Secretary Chris Grayling
> Transport Secretary Chris Grayling

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