YorkRailFan
Established Member
New plans to electrify railway lines in the West Country, starting with tracks from Bristol Temple Meads station, have been announced by the region's metro mayor.
Under Dan Norris's scheme the lines from Temple Meads from the north via Bristol Parkway and Filton Bank will be electrified during the first phase, with the mayor then planning move on to the section of railway that runs from Bristol to Bath Spa and Chippenham in Wiltshire.
Plans to electrify Bristol’s mainline rail services - including from the city to London - were first announced in 2009, but were scrapped in 2016 despite millions of pounds of work being carried out.
Mr Norris said on Thursday (February 1), a detailed study would take place, aimed at reducing the unit cost of electrification. In 2016, it was around £3.5m per single track km and the aim is to slash that to £1.5m, he said.
According to the Office of Rail Regulation, just 38% of the UK’s rail network is currently electrified. That compares to 60% on average in the European Union.
Mr Norris said: "It's the right thing to do for people and the planet. I was proud to vote for electrification under the last Labour government, and today, we're finally heading in the right direction again.
“If we’d stuck to the original plans, our local lines would have been electrified by 2017. Now, in the context of a serious climate emergency, it’s even more important.”
Mr Norris said one option was to use some of the £100m earmarked for regional transport on delivering the plans. Last year Rishi Sunak's government pledged the funding for a mass transit system in Bristol, our sister site BristolLive reported.
Mr Norris added: "I would very much urge colleagues to support this.”
In October, the Great Western Partnership - an alliance of public, private and third-sector stakeholders across South Wales and the South West of England - set out its cross-border rail investment priorities in the wake of prime minister's decision to pull the plug on the Birmingham to Manchester leg of high speed two.
In its 2050 rail vision document, the partnership called for investment on the South Wales mainline and across into the West Country, to allow up to four trains per hour. At the moment, there is around one train every 40 minutes from Bristol Temple Meads to Cardiff.
Bristol Temple Meads definitely needs to have an electrified line that at least links up to Chippenham and Filton Abbey Wood, I'll be keen to see the cost estimate (which does need to be taken with a pinch of salt) but Mr Norris is likely hoping for it to be under £100m (as mentioned in the article, there is £100m available for regional transport development).