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Publication of Integrated Rail Plan for the North and Midlands

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ainsworth74

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This was supposed to happen at 1030 but appears to be running slightly late. You can find the live stream of the Commons here where Grant Shapps is expected to make the announcement shortly. I will update the thread with relevant links once they are available. I would ask that we use this thread to discuss the actual document and it's contents rather than speculation and alternative proposals (such as "my idea for..." type posts) which should be contained to the Speculative Ideas section.

Details​

The Integrated Rail Plan (IRP) sets out the government’s proposals to transform the rail network in the North and Midlands.
It is a £96 billion plan that outlines how major rail projects, including HS2 Phase 2b, Northern Powerhouse Rail and Midlands Rail Hub, will be delivered sooner than previous plans so that communities, towns and cities across the North and Midlands are better connected with more frequent, reliable and greener services and faster journey times.
The plan confirms that the government will:

  • build 3 new high-speed lines including:
    • HS2 from Crewe to Manchester
    • HS2 from the West Midlands to East Midlands Parkway, enabling HS2 trains to join existing lines to serve Nottingham and Derby city centres (unlike original plans)
    • a new high-speed line between Warrington, Manchester and Yorkshire, as part of Northern Powerhouse Rail
  • electrify and/or upgrade 3 existing main lines including:
    • the Transpennine Main Line between Manchester, Leeds and York
    • the Midland Main Line between London St Pancras, the East Midlands, and Sheffield
    • upgrading and improving line speeds on the East Coast Main Line

The plan also confirms that the government will progress options to complete the Midlands Rail Hub and spend £100 million to look at how best to take HS2 trains to Leeds, including assessing capacity at Leeds station and starting work on the West Yorkshire mass transit system.


News story

Integrated Rail Plan: biggest ever public investment in Britain’s rail network will deliver faster, more frequent and more reliable journeys across North and Midlands​

Major rail investment to transform services in the North and Midlands.


  • the Integrated Rail Plan (IRP) will see the biggest ever government investment in Britain’s rail network, with a £96 billion package of rail construction and upgrades for the Midlands and the North
  • plan delivers a modern network that will benefit passengers far sooner than previously planned, with many improvements expected this decade – levelling up more quickly
  • building 3 new high-speed lines, the IRP will transform rail services – boosting inter-city connections
The biggest ever public investment in Britain’s rail network is announced by the government today (18 November 2021), with £96 billion to deliver faster and better journeys to more people across the North and the Midlands, similar to or more quickly than under earlier plans.
Transforming connectivity, the Integrated Rail Plan (IRP) published today will transform both east to west and north to south links, building 3 new high-speed lines, improving rail services to and between the East and West Midlands, Yorkshire and the North West including:
  • Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR) will connect Leeds and Manchester in 33 minutes, down from 55 minutes now
  • HS2 East will run direct from central Nottingham to Birmingham in 26 minutes, down from 1 hour 14 minutes now, and from central Nottingham to London in 57 minutes. HS2 will also run from London to Sheffield in 1 hour 27 minutes
  • HS2 West will run from London to Manchester in 1 hour 11 minutes and from Birmingham to Manchester in 41 to 51 minutes compared to 86 minutes today.
To most destinations on the HS2 and NPR core routes, both from London and across the Pennines, journey times will be the same as, similar to or faster than the previous proposals – with improvements being delivered for communities across the Midlands and North up to a decade sooner and to more places. Capacity on key routes will also double or treble under plans.
Under earlier plans, smaller towns on existing main lines such as Doncaster, Grantham, Huddersfield, Wakefield, and Leicester would have seen little improvement, and in some cases even their services cut back. The IRP will protect and improve these crucial links and will deliver improvements with far less disruption to local communities. And on both local train lines and inter-city links, rail passengers will benefit from tangible changes, seeing more seats, shorter journeys, and more frequent and more reliable services.
As well as the new high-speed lines, the IRP fully electrifies and upgrades 2 diesel main lines – the Midlands Main Line and the Transpennine Main Line – as well as upgrading a third main line – the East Coast – with higher speeds, power improvements and digital signalling to slash journey times.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said:
My mission is to level up opportunity across our country, which is why we’re making train journeys faster and more reliable through the biggest ever public investment in our rail network.
This is because better rail connections are essential for growing local economies and businesses, and our Integrated Rail Plan will deliver better services to more people, more quickly.
Levelling up has to be for everyone, not just the biggest cities. That’s why we will transform transport links between our biggest cities and smaller towns, ensuring we improve both long-distance and vital local services and enabling people to move more freely across the country wherever they are.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said:
Our plan is ambitious, deliverable and backed by the largest single government investment ever made in our rail network. It will deliver punctual, frequent and reliable journeys for everyone, wherever they live.
Just as the Victorians gave this country our railways nearly 200 years ago, this Integrated Rail Plan will create a modern, expanded railway fit for today and future generations. Significant improvements will be delivered rapidly, bringing communities closer together, creating jobs and making places more attractive to business, and in doing so, rebalancing opportunity across the country.
Our plans go above and beyond the initial ambitions of HS2 and Northern Powerhouse Rail by delivering benefits for communities no matter their size, right across the North and Midlands, up to 10 to 15 years earlier.
For NPR, we have chosen the first of the options put forward by Transport for the North (TfN) in 2019, a mixture of newbuild high-speed and upgraded conventional line. TfN’s options for full newbuild high-speed line were carefully studied but would have made journeys between Leeds and Manchester only 4 minutes faster at a cost of an extra £18 billion, and taken up to a decade longer to deliver.
The package of investment confirms:

Three new high-speed lines, covering 110 miles:​

  • Complete HS2 from Crewe to Manchester, with new stations at Manchester Airport and Manchester Piccadilly
  • a new high-speed line between Birmingham and East Midlands Parkway. Trains will continue to central Nottingham, Derby and Sheffield on an upgraded and electrified Midland Main Line
  • delivering NPR through a new high-speed line between Warrington, Manchester and Marsden in Yorkshire as in the first of the options originally put forward by TfN in 2019.
  • a study to look at the best way to take HS2 trains to Leeds, including capacity at Leeds Station.

The upgrading or electrification of 3 existing lines:​

  • the complete electrification of the Midland Main Line from London to Nottingham, Derby and Sheffield.
  • a programme of rapid upgrades to the East Coast Main Line to the East Midlands, Yorkshire and the North East. Journey times will be up to 25 minutes faster than now
  • full electrification and upgrade of the Transpennine Main Line between Manchester, Leeds and York as part of delivering the first phase of NPR, installing full digital signalling, with longer sections of three- and four-tracking to allow fast trains to overtake stopping services, and increase through passenger services by 20%. An additional £625 million in new funding has been confirmed today to progress the Transpennine Route Upgrade
  • in total, electrification of more than 180 miles of route, meaning that 75% of the country’s main lines will be electric, to meet the ambition of removing all diesel-only trains from the network by 2040, as part of our commitment to reach Net Zero by 2050.

The freeing up of money to improve local services and integrate them properly with HS2 and NPR:​

  • a new mass transit system for Leeds and West Yorkshire, righting the wrong that Leeds is the largest city in Western Europe without one. There will be £200 million of immediate funding to plan the project and start building it, and we commit to supporting West Yorkshire Combined Authority over the long term to ensure that this time, it gets done
  • separately, we could halve journey times between Bradford and Leeds, to be as low as 12 minutes
  • greater connectivity benefits between the West and East Midlands in comparison to previous plan and progressing work on options to complete Midlands Rail Hub, dramatically increasing local services through central Birmingham and across the Midlands and connecting them better to HS2
  • investment to deliver a programme of fares, ticketing and retail reform including the roll out of contactless pay-as-you-go ticketing at commuter stations in the Midlands and North, ending ticket queues and tackling confusion about fares by automatically ensuring that you are charged the best price. The government will also drive towards rolling out digital ticketing across the whole network
The new plans, using a mixture of new-build high-speed line and upgraded conventional lines, were drawn up after it became clear that the full HS2 and NPR schemes as originally proposed would have cost up to £185 billion and not entered service until the early to mid-2040s.
Building on the expert findings of wide-ranging internal and independent analysis, including from the National Infrastructure Commission, the plan will deliver better outcomes for passengers in a faster and more efficient way than under original plans for the schemes.

 
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ScotGG

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Apparently down to the wire last night. Sunak and Treasury still seeking cuts to investment.

Usual UK attitude. Long term pain due to short term thinking.

Levelling up in effect means cutting London investment to low levels elsewhere rather than lift elsewhere to London levels. All suffer.

Can't be like other nations and have various areas see needed investment can we?

Still, many will play the gov game of North v South rather than ensuring all regions see investment.
 

Doctor Fegg

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Crewe-Manchester; Birmingham-East Midlands (with "central Nottingham" and "central Derby" mentioned as destinations, so presumably EM Parkway); Warrington-Manchester-West Yorkshire confirmed as new HSLs, 110mi in all.

180mi of newly electrified line - i.e. MML and Transpennine (not clear how far up the MML though: Market Harborough mentioned, and presumably EMP-Nottingham/Derby).

Track improvements & digital signalling on the ECML.

West Yorkshire Mass Transit System.

26min Birmingham-Nottingham, 55min York-Manchester, 12min Bradford-Leeds.

Restates yesterday's contactless fares announcement.
 
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LNW-GW Joint

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"Warrington-Manchester-West Yorkshire" new line.
No mention of the HS2-WCML link to Golborne.
MML electrification only mentioned to Market Harborough.
He's just mentioned Marsden as the eastern end of the "NPR" route from Warrington - sounds like a new Pennine tunnel (or upgraded Standedge).
 
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Roast Veg

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Existing WYCA mass transit will be supported "so that this time it actually gets done".
 

Bigman

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Just quoted Bradford to Leeds in 12 minutes. NPR must be coming through Bradford then.
 

achmelvic

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Doubt it. Electrification via New Pudsey more likely. But we'll see.
That's my expectation, curious how that fits in with WY mass transit

Shapps keeps saying 110 miles of 'new high speed line', how's that breakdown?

I assume none of it in Yorkshire from the sound of it.
 

Bigman

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Just heard him say Warrington to Marsden. Electrification cannot deliver Leeds to Bradford in 12 minutes. Track speeds will just not allow it.
 

Roast Veg

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Just heard him say Warrington to Marsden. Electrification cannot deliver Leeds to Bradford in 12 minutes. Track speeds will just not allow it.
Running to somewhere near St James instead of Interchance would be a start.
 

JamesT

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a new high speed line between warrington to manchester???????

That is presumably the provided for link at the junction where HS2 splits between heading North to Wigan and East to Manchester via the Airport. Then the other half will run from that junction to Warrington (with trains continuing on classic lines to Liverpool?)
 

Bletchleyite

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So I guess it's going to be repurposing of the Ditton Jn-Warrington BQ LL line, but then what is it to be east of that, as the line stops there? The trackbed runs to Altrincham but that'd be a long way round...
 

LNW-GW Joint

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Birmingham-Crewe and Birmingham-Totton combined is about 110 miles isn't it?
New lines will be Water Orton-East Midlands Parkway (30m), Crewe-Manchester (30m).
Looks like there is no new line into Leeds/York (or Liverpool).
Warrington-Marsden (minus HS2 Rostherne-Piccadilly) is about 25 miles.
Rostherne-Golborne appears to be under review.
With the ECML being upgraded, it may be that the Edinburgh service will stay on the ECML and not migrate to the WCML.
No obvious changes in Birmingham to put XC services on the new line.
 
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doningtonphil

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Crewe-Manchester; Birmingham-East Midlands (with "central Nottingham" and "central Derby" mentioned as destinations, so presumably EM Parkway); Warrington-Manchester-West Yorkshire confirmed as new HSLs, 110mi in all.
Not sure how East Midlands Parkway would count as either Central Derby or Central Nottingham. Yes, services from both of those locations pass through EMP but provision of transport from EMP to the city centres is poor. Shuttle train services would need to be set up. Nottingham trams could be extended to EMP quite easily but nothing direct for Derby. That is why Toton woulf have been ideal- on the main artery (A52) between the 2 cities so 'last few mile' connections by public transport already available withe the possibility of provision of new tram links etc. However, the route for HS2 East is an engineering nightmare beyond EMP - with the line on stilts over the town of Long Eaton for example, so it is easy to see why provision of a route just as far as EMP would be an attractive cost saver.

I dont think any of the suggestions for the East Midlands Hub have included any specific links to East Midlands Airport, despite teh fact the HS2 route comes within a hair's breadth of it (and was at one time mooted to be going right under it. Inclusion of a Rapid Transit system from EMP to EMA woudl be very sensible
 

Roast Veg

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Cleethorpes to London service being investigated, perhaps as part of ECML upgrades?
 

Howardh

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Just heard him say Warrington to Marsden. Electrification cannot deliver Leeds to Bradford in 12 minutes. Track speeds will just not allow it.
I heard that, so not electrified after Marsden so a hybrid unit changes to diesel and goes at today's speeds towards Leeds? So Manchester to Huddersfield/Leeds would save, what, 5 mins if it's an electrified new line to Marsden?
I'd like to see a map...
 

achmelvic

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So does talk of HS line to Marsden mean a new tunnel rather than attempting to reuse Standedge?
 
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