Mayors reveal plan for Manchester-Birmingham line
The mayors of Greater Manchester and the West Midlands have revealed plans for a new railway line connecting the two regions âat a fraction of the costsâ of the scrapped northern leg of HS2.
A private consortium has proposed the new 50-mile (80km) Midlands-Northwest Rail Link â running from Lichfield, north of Birmingham, to High Legh, south-east of Warrington â following a review commissioned by the mayors.
The report found the new railway line was vital to addressing growing strain on the existing West Coast Main Line (WCML) and M6 motorway.
The plan relies on investment from the private sector, and would cost substantially less than HS2 phase 2, which would have seen a new high-speed railway built between the West Midlands and Manchester.
Doing nothing ânot viable optionâ
Work on the London to Birmingham leg of HS2 is already under way, with at least ÂŁ22.5bn already being spent.
But the consortium, led by infrastructure expert Sir David Higgins, found the project would not improve capacity north of Birmingham âdue to the infrastructure constraints that remain unresolved without the later stages of HS2â.
ââDoing nothingâ on this corridor [between Manchester and Birmingham] is not a viable option, from either economic or operational perspectives,â the review said.
âThe transport network simply will not function effectively, and the nationâs current investment in HS2 will be poor value for money.â
It found the WCML was âamong the least reliable railways in Europeâ, with much of the track network being built in the Victorian era.
âSections of the WCML north of Lichfield will not be able to support any significant increase in freight capacity in the north, Wales and Scotland,â the report said.
Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham said the failure to replace the railway would become âa huge barrier to growth in the country that the government says it wantsâ.
âThere is no way on Godâs earth that the current West Coast Main Line and the M6 can be relied upon for decades,â he added.
âIf you put in this extra connecting piece between those two areas, you will then have a network that can support growth in London, the south east, the Midlands, and, of course, the north west.â
Sir David called on the new government to support the proposal, which is predicted to cost between 60 and 75% less than the proposed HS2 northern leg.
The savings would be delivered through lower design speeds, ballasted track, UK rather than European standard cross-sections and building on the existing rail network.
Sir David said: âWhat we need now is for the new government to work together with the business community and Combined Authorities â take the practical steps to make a new rail link a reality.â
More than ÂŁ2bn had been spent on HS2 phase 2 before it was scrapped, with the consortium proposing to use much of this land and infrastructure.
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