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Category Archives: Hs2

Hs2 & the Lords – a reality check…

24 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in House of Lords, Hs2, Politics, Transport

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House of Lords, Hs2, Politics, Transport

Tomorrow there may (or may not) be some media attention paid to a few elderly Lords publishing their report on Hs2, one of whom is a notorious climate change sceptic, Lord Lawson – not the sort of man to endorse green rail travel!

Whatever, I’m sure those opposed to Hs2 will be going into absolute paroxysms over it as we’re in the run up to an election and they’re desperate for some good news.

So, let’s have a little reality check, shall we?

The Hs2 Hybrid Bill was voted through by a massive majority of 452 MPs of all parties.

Hs2 is supported by all the major political parties – regardless of political persuasion.

Hs2 is supported by the ‘core cities’ group consisting of Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham & Sheffield.

http://www.corecities.com/news-events/core-cities-group-supports-high-speed-2-jobs-and-growth-britain

Let’s also remember what political & economic powerhouses those cities are.

Hs2 is also supported by the CBI, the British Chambers of Commerce & local government.

Billions of pounds of city regeneration schemes in London, Leeds, Manchester & Birmingham are riding on the back of Hs2, not to mention the thousands of jobs & wealth those will create.

Now, what was all that fuss about four unelected Lords?

Needless to say, I’ll be casting a critical eye over their report in the fullness of time…

In the meantime, Labour have come straight out and said the Lords report alters nothing!

http://press.labour.org.uk/post/114529592779/labour-supports-hs2-but-vital-economic-benefits

UPDATE: 25th March.

The furore has been strangely muted. Of course, the usual suspects have worked themselves into a frenzy, but I wonder how many of them have actually looked at a copy of the report? Hardly any, I’ll bet. Some sections of the media have reached for their book of trite phrases (Hs2 is ’embattled’), but what’s absolutely classic is judging the language of the hysterical antis with the words of the Committee’s Chair, Lord Hollick who has described their view in measured terms thus:” We are not (yet) convinced of the need for Hs2″

This is immediately run through the anti Hs2 spin machine to become (take your pick) “The House of Lords has” -‘damned/trashed/debunked/annihilated’ the case for Hs2. So, no hysteria there then!

Hs2aa & the ‘Hs2 will cost £138bn’ deceit exposed

24 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Hs2aa, Railways, Transport

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Anti Hs2 mob, Hs2, Hs2aa, Investment, Railways

The anti Hs2 campaign group Hs2aa like to pretend that they have more integrity than fellow travellers StopHs2 (whom they look down their noses on – especially Campaign Manager Joe Rukin, a man who’s notorious for telling porkies). The reality is – it’s a load of hypocritical nonsense – as the latest rubbish about the ‘true cost’ of Hs2 being £138bn shows in spades.

This fantasy figure was concocted by Dan Mitchell and Andrew Bodman & presented in a petition to the HS2 Select Committee on March 2nd.

Andrew Bodman is a figurehead in SNAG (South Northants Action Group) but he was parachuted into that group to stop it imploding due to its ‘managerial difficulties’ He’s actually a Director of Hs2aa (see here);
http://www.hs2actionalliance.org/about/team/

Bodman co-concocted the risible £138bn which is justified thus (taken from a StopHs2 press release) http://stophs2.org/news/13236-hidden-costs-double-hs2-bill

“The total cost of HS2 (Phases One and Two) could well reach £138 billion, maybe more. Yet the official figure is £50 billion including trains.

The largest additional amount (£30 billion) is the ongoing subsidy that is likely to be required. Only two high speed lines in the world are thought to be profitable (Paris – Lyon and Tokyo – Osaka) and it is extremely unlikely that HS2 will join that exclusive club. A subsidy will be needed to cover the interest payments on the considerable debt incurred in building this line, higher operating costs of such trains and revenues that fail to match forecasts as passenger numbers will probably turn out to be less than expected. Several countries subsidise their high speed lines by $1bn per year or more. A £0.5bn subsidy per year has been estimated over 60 years.

It also appears that the construction costs for Phase Two have been significantly understated. At present, the estimated construction cost (without contingency) of Phase One is £108m per mile while that for Phase Two is £59m per mile. By referencing the construction cost per mile for HS1, the HS2 Phase One cost per mile seems the more likely. With the current contingency for HS2 construction costs being 70%, it means the Phase Two construction cost is likely to rise from £21.2bn to £39.4bn.

The next element to be factored in is an additional power station bearing in mind how little spare generating capacity the UK has at present. Using input from electrical engineers, it is believed that an additional medium sized power station will be required to meet the demands of these powerful trains on what will be an intensively used series of lines. £16bn has been added to cover this requirement.

Furthermore Crossrail 2 will be needed at Euston to help the onward travel of rail passengers to their end destinations. The existing Underground services will be unable to cope with such significant increases of passenger numbers once HS2 Phase Two is running, and this shortcoming has been recognised by Transport for London. We have suggested a £7bn contribution to Crossrail 2 which is approximately a quarter of its total estimated cost to ensure that this work proceeds, and in a timely fashion.

Currently there is no research and development budget for HS2 which seems extraordinary when the plan is to run trains faster than in most other countries and more intensively between London and Birmingham than on any other high speed line in the world. There are many issues needing investigation including electrical engineering, vibration, sound and other speed related issues. A nominal £5bn for research and development has been added.

Other areas that have been added include security, track maintenance and upgrading the overhead line equipment on sections of the West Coast Mainline and East Coast Mainline (used by classic compatible HS2 trains) to provide improved reliability.

There are a number of costs associated with HS2 which cannot be readily costed at this stage, e.g. the HS2 Growth Taskforce Schemes for getting cities HS2 ready.

In addition there are concerns that some of the contingency amounts may be insufficient bearing in mind the recent cost increases which have occurred on the Great Western and other electrification programmes. The cost of the Great Western Electrification programme has gone up by 70% in the latter half of 2014 alone and 180% since first conceived, while the cost of each connection to the National Grid has increased by 150%.

Dan Mitchell said he was concerned that Parliament was currently being misled as are taxpayers. He is very aware that the Public Accounts Committee and Major Projects Authority also have serious concerns regarding the cost of this significant project. Dan Mitchell has also said that £138 billion is a disproportionate amount of money to spend on a single project. He believes there are other more pressing issues to address on the rail network.”

Let’s dissect these claims, shall we…?

“Ongoing subsidy over 60 years – £30bn.”
As the Hybrid Bill Committee very promptly picked up, other countries make policy decisions to subsidise their railways more than we do. But that’s just one reason why alleging that HS2 will need a subsidy on the basis of international comparisons is invalid.

First, our InterCity trunk routes serving the markets that HS2 will work in now pay premiums to the DfT for their franchises, so why should HS2 not do the same? Then, our high speed line will be used more intensively than those abroad, so will have more trains earning money on its infrastructure to share the cost.

As to the expected figures, the “Economic Case for HS2” in Table 15 shows a Present Value (that is, figures for every year of the project life rolled into one) of operating costs of £22.1 billion, and a Present Value for fares revenue of £31.1 billion. So, far from requiring a subsidy, over the project life fares will exceed operating costs by a total of £9 billion.

“Phase Two construction cost correction – £18.2 bn”
No, it is not valid to estimate the Phase 2 cost from Phase 1, as Phase 1 has more of the expensive items such as stations – not just Euston but also Old Oak Common, Birmingham Interchange with its 4-track section and complex junctions, and Birmingham Curzon Street – and tunnels. By comparison, Phase 2 is a relatively simple job, with less in the way of additional stations, tunnelling and complex junctions relative to its length.

“Crossrail 2 contribution – £7 bn”
Not this old chestnut again! TfL have stated clearly that they regard Crossrail 2 as essential for London full stop. It simply makes sense to construct its station box at Euston/Kings Cross at the same time as Euston is being rebuilt. If anyone could identify a true incremental cost imposed by HS2 they might have a point, but no-one has.

The £7 bn suggested to be charged to HS2 is not only arbitrary but a paper transfer, as it would just make the funding requirement for Crossrail2 £7 bn lower and leave total UK spending exactly where it would have been. But if you insist, just remember when charging HS2 with a quarter of the cost, to credit HS2 with a quarter of the benefits. And that means that effect on the HS2 BCR is zilch.

“Research and Development – £5bn”
This is pure fantasy. When did BR ever spend that much on research, whilst developing pioneering technologies such as Solid State Interlocking for signalling systems? And just for once we are learning from the high speed pioneers, rather than making the mistakes that others then learn from. HS2 is based around proven, off the shelf technology.

“Maintenance of track – £3.36 bn”
No, this has not been forgotten. Maintenance of the HS2 infrastructure, and the track access charge to pay Network rail to maintain theirs, are both in the calculated operating costs.

“Upgraded overhead line equipment WCML and ECML – £2 bn”
Well even if this isn’t just plucked out of the air, and not already counted in the capital costs, its benefits will be shared by all trains on the routes in question, not just HS2 trains. So the costs should be shared, and that doesn’t leave very much to be charged to HS2.

“Additional costs of Euston station – £2 bn”
To be funded by property development.

As for the rest, how am I meant to know any more than Bodman or Mitchell? None of this is their speciality any more than mine. But if their research is as valid as the big items above, it doesn’t bode well – for them.
So much for Hs2aa trying to pretend they have integrity. It’s one of their Directors who’s put his name to this rubbish remember…

Who can forget the lie from Hs2aa Director of Local Campaigns Peter Chegwyn about Coventry having a worse service than in steam days (nailed here)?

Or their lie about £8.3bn of ‘service cuts’ (nailed here)?

Their ‘sword of truth’ is just as bent as the last person who claimed the right to wield it – Jonathan Aitkin…

Crazy anti Hs2 campaigns of the week. No 1

22 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Railways, Transport

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Hs2, Politics, Railways

Every so often the anti Hs2 campaigners get outraged over something so superbly bonkers it’s worth highlighting to give people a laugh, so I’ve decided to start what I suspect will be a regular feature as their campaign has plenty of people who are either perma-outraged or simply as mad as a box of frogs…

Today the Sunday times has featured ideas on what the interiors of the new Hs2 trains may look like.
http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/news/uk_news/National/article1534612.ece

None of this is actually new, but the Times mentions that the trains will have a range of classes, some of which will be fitted with leather seats.

This has caused absolute squeals of outrage from certain quarters, notably one Mop Denson, a Chilterns based anti campaigner. Mop is a regular, having frequently Tweeted that people should vote UKIP to ’save’ the Chilterns. The fact that UKIP don’t believe in man-made global warming & support fracking (so would do more damage to the Chilterns than good ) seems not to have occurred to her!

Mop has been busy tweeting that ;

Mopsnip 2

I can only assume that Mop never travels on her local First Great Western services, which have err, leather seats in First Class (and have had since 2007!), or for that matter Grand Central or Hull trains, which also have the same. Here’s FGW’s;

DG09017. FGW HST refurb. Bombardier. Derby. 20.12.06.
I presume that Mop will now be starting a campaign to remove such extravagances from our existing fleet & have them replaced with less hard wearing & more difficult to clean cloth ones?

I think we already know her answer;

DG166268. Anti Hs2 demo. London. 25.11.13.

The woeful truth behind the anti Hs2 campaign’s claims of expansion & ‘mass support’

21 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Politics, StopHs2, Transport

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Hs2, Hs2aa, Politics, Railways, StopHs2, Transport

It’s a month on from my blog exposing how little real support the anti Hs2 campaign has so I thought it was time for an update. After all, we’re in the run up to a general election & Hs2 has been in the news. The 3 major parties have all restated their support whilst UKIP & the Greens have restated their opposition. Has this galvanised the anti Hs2 campaign? The immortal words of the TV character Jim Royle spring to mind.

Previously, I’d highlighted the fact that all their claims of ‘mass support’ & being a ‘growing campaign’ were nothing but hot air & I used their support on social media to illustrate this. Of course, since then the Jeremy Clarkson incident broke. That really went viral, both on social media & in the real world. Over 1 million folks signed a petition to get the presenter reinstated!

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/celebritynews/jeremy-clarkson-petition-soars-past-one-million-signatures-as-suspended-top-gear-host-warns-protest-never-works-10124676.html

This seems to have thrown anti Hs2 campaigners into a bit of a depression. After all, they’ve been trying to drum up support for years & got nowhere. Then along comes Clarkson & within days – bang – 1 million signatures! Ironically, 1 million is the number some anti Hs2 folks claim are blighted by the project…

Let’s revisit the original 22nd February ‘scores on the doors’ for the Hs2 anti’s on social media. Today’s updated scores are in brackets along with percentage changes.

Here’s the Twitter followers of the main anti Hs2 groups:

Hs2 Action Alliance (@hs2aa): 3,199 followers (today 3,237 + 38 = 1.19%)

StopHs2 (@stophs2): 4,112 (today 4,167 + 55 = 1.34%)

I’ve also included both of StopHs2’s leaders.

Joe Rukin (@joerukin): 1,857 (today 1,871 + 14 = 0.75%)

Penny Gaines (@penny_gaines): 399 (today 401+ 2 = 0.5%)

51M (@51M_Hs2project): 610 (today 613 + 3 = 0.49%)

Here’s AGAHST’s ‘leader’

AGAHST’s Deanne DuKhan (@DuKhanD): 654 (today 654 + 0 = 0%)

Meanwhile, over on Facebook (used by over 30 million Britons);

Hs2aa: 2,168 (today 2,154 – 14 = minus 0.65%)
https://www.facebook.com/HS2AA?fref=ts

StopHs2: 6,415 (today 6,325 – 90 = minus 1.4%)
https://www.facebook.com/STOP.HS2?fref=ts

51M: 393 (today 387 – 6 = minus 1.53%)
https://www.facebook.com/pages/51m_HS2project/218611348167462

It’s worth noting that 51M’s FB account still hasn’t been updated since the 1st June 2011.

Hmm, so much for that expanding campaign! Expanding? It’s actually shrinking on the media with the biggest penetration (Facebook) and hardly moving at all on Twitter (a medium widely regarded as stagnant). Not only are they failing to get their message across, they’re actually in retreat. Perhaps they should sack Joe Rukin & give his job to Jeremy Clarkson?

Of course, in real life – things are even worse. Hs2aa has blown all its money on futile legal cases so isn’t even churning out misleading posters. StopHs2 isn’t in any better position. No-one has organised any demonstrations at Parliament because (frankly) the numbers showing up is plain embarrassing – I’ve seen more life in a tramps vest! What is also telling is that their annual gathering in Staffordshire has bitten the dust too. It failed to happen in 2014 & there’s no sign of it happening in 2015 either. Talk about failing to get your message across…

So,next time you hear a few lazy journalists trot out the usual trite phrases about how there’s ‘strong’ opposition to Hs2, feel free to ask them, “where”?

More Rukin revelations (the great Royal Mail fiddle)

18 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Railways, StopHs2, Transport

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Anti Hs2 mob, Hs2, Joe Rukin, Politics, Railways

The published minutes of the High Speed Bill Ctte for the 12th March contain an interesting revelation from Stop Hs2’s Joe Rukin on his stunt to stand for MP in the 2010 election. It was all a cynical scam to avoid paying the Royal Mail! Here’s the extract from the minutes:

74. CHAIR: Are you a candidate on this occasion or not?

75. MR RUKIN: No. That was just a publicity stunt to get leaflets to everyone in the constituency for 800 quid.

Click to access 120315_Uncorrected_Morning.pdf

The ‘800 quid’ Rukin refers to is the deposit a candidate must pay to stand in an election (it’s actually £500 but then Rukin’s never been good with facts).

The constituency of Kenilworth & Southam contained 64,362 voters in 2010. At the time, a 2nd class stamp was 32p, so it should have cost StopHs2 £20,595 to distribute his anti-HS2 leaflets. By getting the taxpayer to subsidise the mailshot by disguising it as an electoral leaflet, stopHs2 saved a fortune

Perhaps someone with either knowledge of the postal and/or electoral system might like to answer this unanswered question. Do Royal Mail get reimbursed to deliver election letters out of taxpayers money via the Electoral Commission or similar? If so. Rukin has surely fiddled the taxpayer?

The irony is of course, it saved stopHs2 money but it didn’t save their campaign. That was holed below the waterline when a massive majority of 452 MPs voted to pass the Hs2 Hybrid Bill & it’s been slowly sinking ever since…

UPDATE:

The Cabinet Office have confirmed that the Taxpayers DOES pay for the delivery of the minimum of one leaflet for each candidate in a General Election. This means there’s little doubt that Rukin’s cynical election tactic has duped taxpayers of thousands of pounds.

Election special: Farage’s fag packet calculations are more porkies.

15 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Railways, Transport, UKIP

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Cornwall, Farage, Hs2, Politics, Railways, UKIP

This month all the major political parties reiterated their support for building Hs2, much to the frustration of the anti Hs2 campaign who’ve clearly had their bluff called. The antis may be busy on social media pretending otherwise but in the real world it’s clear their campaign’s unraveling rapidly. None of the major political parties see them as a credible political force they’re going to lose any sleep over. Only UKIP & the Greens oppose Hs2 & this week UKIP unveiled their Hs2 campaign poster. I have to say, it’s stunning in its blandness. ‘UKIP will stop Hs2 before it runs out of control’ it whimpers.

Nigel Farage travelled to the Chilterns to launch the poster along with UKIPs local Candidate, Chris ‘imaginary friends’ Adams (of Twitter fame, see previous blog). Here’s a report from the Western Morning News;

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/UKIP-scrap-HS2-says-Farage-8211-highlighting-poor/story-26168763-detail/story.html

Note Farage’s claim that “Penzance is five hours 11 minutes from Paddington. It was quicker to get to Penzance before the First World War”.

Really Nigel? Let’s examine that claim shall we?

Today’s fastest service between the two is the 10.06 Paddington – Penzance which takes 5hrs 5mins (not 5hr 11mins as Farage claimed, no train service takes that time). It stops at Reading, Exeter, Newton Abbot & Plymouth before it enters Cornwall.

Sim Harris, the Managing Editor of Railnews (and a Cornishman himself) tells me this: “The best London-Penzance times in 1902 and 1947 were c.9h30 and 7h00 respectively. In summer 1960 (still with steam) the 10.30 ex Padd managed 6h05 (but this was non-stop as far as Plymouth, where an engine change was required). In 1971 the best time was 5h35, but that was again the 10.30. (*others were still taking 6h00+).

Only the BR Intercity 125s made the present timings possible”.

So, Farage is caught out telling porkies yet again. There’s a surprise!

UPDATE at 18:44.

A few hour after I’d written this, Virgin Trains East Coast MD @DavidHorne had done some research through copies of the old Bradshaw timetables & tweeted this;

“Bradshaws 1922 timetable has the Limited dep Paddington 1030, arrive Penzance 1700. Stops at PLY, TRU, Gwinear Rd & St Erth.”

That’s 6hrs 30mins – far short of the current 5hr 05mins. David’s second tweet revealed some genuine pre WW1 timings:

“From Oct 1906 after Westbury route opened, best Pad-Pz journey time was 6h35, cut to 6h30 in 1914 (on the 1030). Now it’s 5h05”

So, there we have it – Farage’s factoid farrago. Once again UKIP haved proved that – as far as they’re concerned, facts are what you make up.

For those who enjoy such things, here are the 1902 & 1922 timetables;

1902 GWR TT A

1922 Bradshaw

People care more about Jeremy Clarkeson than they do about opposing Hs2

11 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Railways

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Tags

Hs2, Railways, StopHs2

Today’s the 5th anniversary of the launch of Hs2 & also a delicious irony that shows how the only folk who really worry about Hs2 are the people who live on the route.

For years anti Hs2 campaigners have launched petition after petition, trying to drum up opposition to the project & show how many people support them.

They’ve been a disaster. Here’s their best effort;

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-15256229

All they’ve shown is the opposite. Each time they launch a new one, the numbers fall off. Some of the petitions have been given months to run & still got bugger all signatures. Yet anti’s assure us that the ‘majority’ oppose Hs2.

Then, today,the news breaks about Jeremy Clarkson’s ‘fracas’ & suspension by the BBC. Within the space of a few hours, 350,000 sign a petition to have him reinstated.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-31832698

It puts the anti Hs2 mobs claims of mass public support into perspective, doesn’t it?

 

Why the anti Hs2 campaign won’t be celebrating Hs2’s 5th birthday..

11 Wednesday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Green Party, Hs2, Michael Dugher MP, Politics, Railways, Transport, UKIP

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Hs2, Joe Rukin, Railways, StopHs2, Transport. Michael Dugher MP, UKIP

Ironically, today the campaign against Hs2 is ‘celebrating’ the 5th anniversary of the announcement of the project.  You would have thought they’d have known better as all they’re doing is drawing attention to their five years of failure in trying to stop it!

With nothing new to say & having no cunning plans now all their previous ones have ended in disappointment & failure StopHs2 are trying to bring back their ‘No votes for you with Hs2’ campaign from the dead.  Bad move. The rotting corpse is too far gone to resuscitate, not least because the anti Hs2 campaign has too few supporters who command too few votes.  I’ve looked at this in two previous blogs;

https://paulbigland.wordpress.com/2015/01/17/the-anti-hs2-campaign-dying-by-degrees-pt1/

&

https://paulbigland.wordpress.com/2015/02/22/the-anti-hs2-campaigns-numbers-dont-add-up-again-social-media-edition/

In the intervening time, things have got worse for their campaign.  The Hs2 Hybrid Bill Committee continue to plough through petitions & remain on course for the Bill to gain Royal Assent by December 2016.

On the political front, all three major parties remain committed to the Hs2 project. The anti Hs2 campaign constantly predicted party political U-turns.  None have ever materialised as no-one is actually frightened by their campaign.  There might be a couple of nervous Tory MPs on the Chilterns Hs2 route but even there the challenge from UKIP seems to be receding after UKIP’s hopeful Chris Adams was exposed in the national media for packing his Twitter feed with fake followers;

https://paulbigland.wordpress.com/2015/02/08/ukip-the-anti-hs2-mob-are-at-it-again/

You can see why UKIP & the anti’s get on, can’t you? Both groups largely rely on imaginary friends!

Meanwhile, Labour’s Shadow Transport Minister gave an interview to February’s ASLEF Journal, where he said: “We are absolutely committed to HS2”

Click to access 1502aslefjournal.pdf

Absolutely no sign of a U-turn there then…

The national opinion polls offer nothing positive either.  The real political race is between parties who all support Hs2, whilst the two that oppose UKIP & The Greens have both had a torrid time.  There’s an almost weekly drip of stories about racism within UKIP (where trying to stop them popping up is like playing a game of ‘whack a mole’) & the Greens have had their Leader, Natalie Bennett, implode in a radio interview that’s gone viral.  The Greens rail policy doesn’t exactly stand up to scrutiny either.  I’ve dissected it here;

https://paulbigland.wordpress.com/2015/03/08/the-greens-rail-policy-is-a-dogmatic-mess/

UK polling reports predict that, between them (at best) the Greens & UKIP will have less than half a dozen MPS. That’s meant to Stophs2?  Oh, please…

Meanwhile, things continue to get worse at home.  At the Hs2 Committee hearing on the 10th March, Denham Against Hs2 Chairman Frank Partridge let the cat out of the bag about the number of Hs2 ‘Action’ groups.  The likes of Hs2aa are still pretending there are over 90.  Frank admitted to the Committee that the real number is ’40 to 50′ – around half the numbers claimed!  More proof (if it were needed) that the campaign’s been exaggerating the size of its activist base.

All this leaves the anti Hs2 campaign with bugger all to celebrate on Hs2’s 5th birthday.  If I was Joe Rukin, I’d be too busy looking through the ‘situations vacant’ columns to be boasting about how a lot of imaginary voters are going to Stop Hs2….

The Greens rail policy is a dishonest, dogmatic mess…

08 Sunday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Green Party, Hs2, Politics, Railways

≈ 7 Comments

NOTE: Much of this blog was written in 2015 with updates added in later years.

Buoyed by dissatisfaction with the major political parties over Brexit the Greens are placing themselves as a serious political party rather than just another pressure group.

Their problem is their policies & the way they choose them haven’t kept up. They also have a nasty habit of being rather authoritarian & don’t seem to like listening to advice – unless it’s from people they want to hear.

Personally, when I lived in London I would often vote Green, especially in the Mayoral elections where they normally got my secondary vote. Like many people I liked the idea of the Greens but what I’ve seen & heard these past few years has changed my opinion. The Greens made a mess of running Brighton & their pronouncements on rail transport (and Hs2 in particular) have combined hand-wringing, daft ideas & very dodgy assumptions. Then we saw their then leader, Natalie Bennett implode in an interview with LBC radio’s Nick Ferrari.

This has led me to cast a critical eye over their policies relating to rail transport. What I’ve found is less than impressive. In parts, it’s downright dishonest. You see, the Greens have become obsessed with who owns the railways rather than understanding how they operate. They seem to have fallen for the populist rather than the pragmatic. They’ve ditched the chance to genuinely do things that will help the environment in favour of tub-thumping to gain votes.

I’ve cast a critical eye over the policy statements which they’ve displayed on their website. The one for Transport dates from 2009. It was amended in 2014 and again in 2017, more than two years after I originally wrote this critique.

http://policy.greenparty.org.uk/tr.html

Now, there is some good stuff in there but what amazed me is how nothing is costed. It’s one huge statement of intent, a shopping list – with no idea how much any of it will be paid for other than a few glib phrases about ‘the polluter pays’, then mention of road charging & fuel taxes. It’s probably no wonder. Can you imagine spelling out detailed costs to the electorate & then expect them to vote for you? The Greens answer to everything seems to be ‘well, we’ll stick a tax on it’.

But my alarm bells really sounded when I read this on rail;

“TR231 The division of rail and track companies into a competitive rather than a cooperative organisation, and the fragmentation of the rail industry into 100 companies by privatisation, has been disastrous for safety and reliability and the provision of an integrated service. The Green Party would overcome this through public ownership (see TR230), but also by making the rail service more democratically accountable at local and regional levels.”

What? Say again? “privatisation, has been disastrous for safety and reliability and the provision of an integrated service”

What a complete and utter load of ideological tosh – and also plain wrong! Note that I wrote this critique way back in March 2015. That totally false statement is still on the Green Party’s website now (April 2018).

First, let’s look at safety. The experts are the Rail Standards & Safety Board (RSSB) who monitor rail safety & collate the statistics in their annual reports. Here’s their 2014 report.

Click to access 2014-07-aspr-2013-14-full-report.pdf

It states: “There were no passenger or workforce fatalities in train accidents in 2013/14. This is the seventh year in succession with no such fatalities. At 0.2 events per year, the ten year moving average for these train accidents is at its lowest ever level”

Hear that? Its lowest ever level. There’s more.

“There were no passenger train derailments. This is the first year with no such derailments since recording began more than 20 years ago”.

More than 20 years ago. Remember that date. That’s pre 1994 – the year the railways were privatised. Now, what was that The Greens said? Oh yes, “privatisation, has been disastrous for safety and reliability”

Some ‘disaster’…

In fact, the truth is that rail safety has been steadily improving for decades & that improvement has continued under privatisation. The Greens are not telling the truth about rail safety.

Now let’s take a look at punctuality. This is more complex due to the fact the way performance is measured has changed over the years. Before privatisation it wasn’t really monitored. BR used to publish a performance figure in their annual report but how it was calculated is a mystery, it certainly wasn’t transparent. The figure never got above 90%. Privatisation brought in a standard method of calculating punctuality called the Public Performance Measure (PPM) it’s monitored independently & published openly.

Rather than supply you with a single chart, I’d suggest you look at this which will give you a whole host of information on punctuality & performance:

Click to access rail-trends-factsheet-2012-13.pdf

There’s no doubt that there was a major setback after that Hatfield crash in 2000. Yet this led to the demise of Railtrack & the establishment of Network Rail, which turned the situation around & punctuality rose even higher. Since privatisation, there’s been a huge increase in the numbers of trains run every year & we’ve seen a massive increase in the numbers of passengers being carried.

Today, punctuality is far better than under BR but it is starting to fall back as our old network is put under increasing pressure. We’ll come back to this point later, but yet again the Greens have been shown to be deceiving people with their claims. Their attitude to privatisation appears to have nothing to do with the reality on the ground & everything to do with grandstanding in the hope of gaining some votes.

Now let’s move on to their attitude to High Speed 2 (Hs2). The Greens claim that:

“TR244 The Green Party believes that long-distance service provision should not concentrate on high speeds where this will affect local service provision or take up an excessive amount of limited resources. The Green Party supports the principle of a new north-south high speed line which would reduce the number of short-haul flights within the UK.”

Well, that’s nice! But what do those fine principles mean in practice? Opposing building a new North-South high speed line, that’s what!

The utterly bizarre thing about this position is that it contradicts many of their other high-sounding ideals about extending rail use, getting more freight on rail, reducing air travel – and protecting the environment (amongst others).

Hs2 is designed to relieve the pressure on the UK’s major rail artery, the West Coast Main Line (WCML) which is the busiest mixed use railway in Europe. The line is already running drastically short of spare capacity at the Southern end between Rugby & London but it will be full by 2024 at the latest. That means we need to be need to do something now. That something is phase 1 of Hs2 which was planned to be open by 2026. Incredibly, the Greens oppose building Hs2. The effect of not building is will be rail gridlock on the WCML, followed shortly after by the East Coast Main Line (ECML). Allowing this to happen defies logic & commonsense. It’s anything but ‘green’, yet this is what the Greens want to do.

The Greens ridiculous situation of facing both ways at the same time came about due to a vote at their 2011 conference. Yes, rather like the old Labour party, conference decides what Green party policy is. Labour were sensible enough to ditch this as it led to such things as the infamous ‘longest suicide note in history’ (Labour’s 1983 manifesto).

The Green Party spokesperson on sustainable development is Professor John Whitelegg, a man who has always opposed high speed rail in the UK, he was influential in getting the Greens to oppose Hs2. He’s hardly an independent expert. He’s a member of the Greens who was a Green Councillor in Lancaster. At the Greens 2011 conference he made a series of statements that simply don’t stand up, such as:

“The proposed HS2 trains would burn 50% more energy mile-for-mile than the Eurostar”

How he can justify this when the specifications of the new Hs2 trains hasn’t been decided on is a mystery. It’s also a remarkably simplistic soundbite as the reality is these are quite complex calculations which contain a host of variables. To reduce it to such a simplistic level renders it meaningless. For example, comparisons between different trains are most usefully made in terms of the average energy used per seat-kilometre (i.e. total energy used per kilometre for the whole train divided by the total number of seats). Where does Prof Whitelegg make this comparison? He doesn’t. It would be impossible. The new Hs2 trains haven’t even been designed yet!

Another soundbite was ““HS2 would produce more than twice the emissions of an intercity train”

Really? Shouldn’t we first define which intercity train? After all, there’s more than one, diesel & electric! Again, this is a complex set of calculations simplified to the point of meaningless. It ignores the fact train design is continually evolving & that high speed trains are getting faster – yet use less energy. It also ignores the fact that emissions are only part of the story.

But my favourite was this, “HS2 is a ‘rich person’s railway’ – the business case assumes that a third of passengers will be on incomes of £70,000 or more”

Clearly, what Prof Whitelegg was doing here was pandering to some good old class prejudices (including his own, he was a long-standing member of the Labour party before joining the Greens). Does anyone seriously think any Government of any political colour would spend billions building a high speed, high capacity railway between our major cities, then price everybody but the ‘rich’ off it? Hs2’s 18 trains per hour will provide 26,000 extra passenger seats per hour, it’s essentially a high speed, long distance metro service. It would be economic & logistical folly to price it only for the ‘rich’ but this is the nonsense that Prof Whitelegg has sold to the Greens, based on an out of context quote taken from the HS2 business case!

So, it seems that, based on hearing only one side of the story – and a story simplified & prejudiced as to be almost worthless, the Greens voted to reject High Speed 2.

I found further evidence of Prof Whitelegg’s crazy attitude to UK railways in this Green party press release;

http://sheffieldgreenparty.org.uk/2012/01/12/press-release-on-hs2-from-green-party-nationally-and-locally/

In it, Prof Whitelegg airily asserts that;

“Capacity problems on the West Coast Main Line can be solved by more trains, longer trains, passing loops and intelligent city regional planning. Going for extra capacity with a new high speed line ignores the impressive development of sophisticated teleconferencing, videoconferences and on-the-move IT solutions. The demand for rail transport is not an immutable physical law and can be reduced by promoting IT solutions. High speed rail is not a ‘get out of jail’ free card for carbon emissions and climate change. The proposed HS2 trains would burn 50% more energy mile-for-mile than the Eurostar and HS2 would produce more than twice the emissions of an intercity train”.

Isn’t it wonderful when, with a flourish of their pen, an academic can ‘solve’ problems like that, without being troubled by the reality on the ground? Let’s have a look at the reality Whitelegg has ignored. A problem with academics is they rarely seem to talk to people at the coal face. If Whitelegg had, he’d have heard a few pithy home truths about his claims about the WCML.

More trains? The WCML is almost at capacity, especially the Southern section between Rugby & Euston. So where’s Whitelegg’s evidence that we can fit more trains on it? He offers none. How on earth he thinks the busiest mixed traffic main line in Europe can fit more & more trains on it for the next 20,50 or 100 years is beyond me.

Longer trains? We’re already doing that. The problem that Whitelegg ignores is you can’t keep extending trains indefinitely. London Midland are already running the maximum length they can – 12 cars. To extend them any more would be horrendously expensive as it would require platforms to be extended. In many places there simply isn’t the physical space to do that as tunnels, bridges & junctions are in the way. Virgin trains have extended most of their Pendolino’s to 11 cars. You could maybe get away with extending them to 12 but they would only be able to be used on certain routes. A great example is Liverpool Lime St station. The approaches are in a very deep cutting under the city with limited space for the crossings that allow trains to use different platforms. Extend the platforms & you can’t fit in the tracks so you render much of the station unusable! It’s the same at Birmingham New St and several other locations. Of course, HS2 doesn’t just help take the pressure off the WCML, it does the same for the ECML. I’d love to take Prof Whitelegg to Kings Cross, stand him on the end of the platform looking towards the Gasworks Tunnels & ask him to explain to me how, exactly, he would extend platforms there! Here’s a picture to illustrate the problem. This is the view from the end of one of the platforms.

DG89612. 365511. Kings Cross. 7.8.11.

There’s also another problem with longer trains. They eat up capacity. With shorter trains you can have more than one using a platform at the same time. Good examples of this are Manchester Piccadilly & Birmingham New St. Stick much longer trains in and you run out of space, so you either have to cut services or build more platforms. Anyone who knows New St station will know building new platforms would be an expensive nightmare.

As for more passing loops…

Whitelegg’s lack of knowledge of rail operations & the situation on the ground has let him down again. He ignores the fact that all of the first 82 miles of the WCML out of Euston is essentially already four tracks, like this:

DG10121. WCML from the cab. Atherstone. 23.4.07.

These run parallel all the way from Euston as far as Hanslope Junction, 56 miles out of Euston. The tracks are in two pairs, the gap between the two sets (known in railway parlance as the ’10 foot’) is closer than on many later railways. This led to difficulties when the route was modernised (at a cost of £9bn) as it wasn’t possible to safely close one pair of tracks & keep the other pair running – the whole line had to be closed. Also, much of the line is built on embankments or traverses deep cuttings (like the famous one at Tring). So, where is the space for Whitelegg’s loops. The simple answer is – there isn’t. Not without spending some very serious money & causing huge disruption. Also, let’s not forget this railway was built over 175 years ago & a lot of it passes through densely populated areas with no spare land either side of the tracks. You’d have to demolish a lot of homes to build loops.

People with knowledge of rail operations could have told Whitelegg & the Green party these problems. What a pity they’ve never bothered to talk to them. But then that’s academia for you. In the real world you ignore the devil in the detail at your peril.

Whitelegg’s airy dismissal of the need for Hs2 & belief we can just keep fitting more & more traffic on our existing Victorian network is nonsense that ignores practical reality. Even if possible, how much capacity would Whitelegg’s hair-brained ideas add to the WCML? He doesn’t say. In contrast, Hs2 will add 143% & massively cut journey times, which will encourage exactly the sort of modal shift the Greens want.

Oh, one last thing. Let’s look at Whitelegg & the Greens claims that we don’t need Hs2 because of “sophisticated teleconferencing, videoconferences and on-the-move IT solutions” We’ve had these for many years now. This little graph shows what impact they’ve had on rail passenger growth. None. At all.

DG206958

Rail travel continues to grow. This week the Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) released the latest figures which shows that we’ve hit record levels;

http://orr.gov.uk/news-and-media/email-alerts/2014/new-orr-data-shows-passenger-journeys-at-record-high

So much for IT removing the need for travel!

2017 UPDATE: The above chart only dates to 2011-12. Has the growth stopped? No. Here’s the latest chart from the Dept of Transport which tracks growth to 2016.

rail growth

You can find more 2016 data here.

One more thing. Whilst I was researching this blog I came across this, which is the speech of an unnamed Green party leader, delivered in 2013;

“There’s been one flagship leading the way in English transport policy in recent years – High Speed Two. Yet it is increasingly clear that HS2 not only should not be built, but will not be built.”

https://www.greenparty.org.uk/news/2013/07/24/hs2-is-dead-green-party-leaders-transport-speech-at-green-economics-institute/

The irony of this confident assertion was that a year later the all party consensus on the need for Hs2 prevailed and the Hs2 Hybrid Bill was passed with 452 MPs voting for and only 41 against! The bill is now passing through the petitioning state & will receive Royal Assent in 2016. UPDATE. Royal Assent was actually granted in February 2017.

So, where does all this leave the Greens? Well, with their green credentials shot to pieces really. Let’s be honest – Hs2 is the only game in town. If we’re not going to end up with rail gridlock we need to be getting on with planning & building a new rail spine now. As it is, the first stage of Hs2 won’t be ready until 2026 & phase 2 won’t be open until possibly 2033. The Greens fine words on encouraging modal shift & getting people out of cars will remain just that – words. They have no credible alternatives to offer. They’ve failed to listen to the rail industry & a wider cross section of transport experts & fallen for the siren words of one of their own with an axe to grind. It’s left them with no credibility & no solutions to offer on transport. In fact, it will only make things worse. Without sufficient rail capacity for the future we’ll be even more reliant on road & air transport. Is that what they really want?

Further reading;

Energy consumption & carbon: http://www.greengauge21.net/wp-content/uploads/Energy-Consumption-and-CO2-impacts.pdf

Hs2 Capacity: http://www.parliament.uk/documents/commons-committees/hs2/oral-evidence/110215_Uncorrected_Afternoon.pdf

Just build moreloops?http://www.appghsr.co.uk/upload/Chiltern%20Railways%20submission.pdf
HSR speeds & carbon; http://tinyurl.com/myx3vxf

Faster trains increase CO2?. The Japanese prove otherwise; http://www.uic.org/cdrom/2008/11_wcrr2008/pdf/R.1.3.3.3.pdf …

The Pacer change hits Northern

27 Friday Feb 2015

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Northern Rail, Railways, Transport

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

DfT, Hs2, Northern Rail

Today the department of Transport issued the ITT (Invitation To Tender) for the new Northern Rail franchise which is due to start on April 1 2016. The ITT sets out the minimum requirements which must be included by bidders in their proposals. Not entirely unexpected was the ITT committing the franchise winner to withdraw all the 4 wheel ‘Pacer’ DMUs (class 142 & 144). Originally the DfT had resisted this idea due to the extra cost to the franchise (over £200m*) but Ministers have decided to override the DfT.

You can find the full ITT here:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/northern-franchise-2015-invitation-to-tende

This means the BR built Pacers will be phased out of Northern service by 31st December 2019. However, it’s not the end of the road for them as they might just possibly be cascaded elsewhere – unless other ITTs (such as the future one for Wales) also prohibit their use. As it is, Pacers will remain in use with Arriva Trains Wales & First Great Western – for now.

Interestingly, the ITT also contains this:

‘5.4.2.2 The Department requires a Franchisee who will procure and bring into service, no later than 1 January 2020, a minimum of 120 new carriages that are capable of being used to operate Passenger Services on non-electrified routes. They must be designed with future demand and users’ needs in mind, with a clear focus on passenger comfort and with a thoroughly modern passenger environment and exterior look. These must be newly-built (not re-using components from existing rolling stock) and, unless the Bidder intends for them to be hauled by a locomotive, must be capable of operating under their own power for significant distances on non-electrified routes’.

Does this preclude Serco-Abellio from signing up to use Vivarail’s ‘new’ DMUs which would be converted from former London Underground D78 stock? Earlier this week I was chatting to Northern’s MD Alex Hynes who certainly can’t be described as a fan of the converted trains. He wouldn’t be offering them in any future ITT. The question now, is – would anyone else?

The announcement also pulls another rug from under anti Hs2 campaigners. They’ve always tried to suggest that Hs2 will suck investment money from the existing network. The Northern ITT has proved how hollow their claims were.

* A letter from Permanent Secretary to the DfT Philip Rutnam to Transport Minister Patrick McLaughlin asks for formal guidance on the issue of Pacer replacement. In his letter, Rutnam states the cost of Pacer replacement will be ‘just under £250m over the life of the franchise’. The letter can be found here; https://www.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/407753/dft-permanent-secretary-to-sos.pdf

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