If you look at HSTed's figures again - (they are analysed at post 35) they show that third rail electrification is not just "marginally" more dangerous but 16 times more dangerous (happy to be corrected).
The argument is that both of those statements are true.
It can be 16 times more dangerous but still not be particularily dangerous.
Borderlands will be one of the last lines to be electrified unless the Welsh Government decided to fund it which is highly unlikely. It has been talked about for decades without any real progression.
It is also a handy line in DC territory that wouldn't be catastrophic for the local economy if the project went badly.
Wigan Wallgate to Skelmersdale and or Kirkby would be better as AC. While linking Skelmersdale with Liverpool is the primary object of the new line plan it would be odd to rule out services to Manchester. Merseyrails new rolling stock has been designed to be converted to dual mode
Do Merseyrail trains catch fire if they go into Greater Manchester or something?
Why can't the conversion point simply be at Wigan Wallgate and have all trains run by Merseyrail using an add-on to their order from Stadler (who made their name making small numbers of units regardless.
Or even run the services between Skelmersdale and Manchester with dual voltage units..... like those 319s already deployed with Northern?
and half of services from Liverpool would terminate at Kirkby in the event of either simple electrification to Wigan or building the Skelmersdale link. The main limitation to AC conversion on Merseyside is the loop and link tunnels height. I wouldn't guarantee that the existing Merseyrail network will stay 3rd rail let alone be expanded. Liverpool South Parkway to Hunts Cross would very likely be converted to AC if the CLC is electrified. Merseyrail would either have to use dual mode trains or stop serving Hunts Cross.
Or more likely any through-CLC trains will simply use dual voltage units and things will stay as they are?
Given that the CLC Is not the fastest route between Liverpool and Manchester any electrification scheme would likely see the route cut in half at Warrington Central anyway.
Warrington Central to Hunts Cross would then be electrified at 750Vdc and turned over to Merseyrail to operate as an extension of Hunts Cross services.
Even before the AC electrification programme hit the rocks it was extremely unlikely that anyone was ever going to actually pay money to rip out good DC electrification equipment to replace it with AC [look how the Electric Spine went down like a lead baloon]- and now it is most certainly not going to happen.
We are
swimming in dual voltage units.