Is there any scope (generally) for such costs to be reduced? eg: doing more work in-house rather than £many per day consultants (especially if the work being done by said consultants is needed on every project, so there would be enough demand from within an organisation such as Network Rail to justify a person(s) dedicated to that task; or is this done already?).
How much does the consent process cost? Is it something along the lines of "£x per DCO application"?
Sorry about all the questions, I'm just curious (and might work in this sort of area in the future)!
The work involved is substantial. Much of the work is done in house, but some elements are very specialist - the consultants involved may be working on your project for a few months, then be working on the Dubai Metro next, then a high speed line in France, Etc Etc. This would be the case here - NR very rarely has to design tunnels or viaducts for example.
For the consents process, the cost is roughly proportionate to the scale of the scheme, and the number of people you have the potential to annoy. You have to demonstrate that you have properly considered all reasonable options for the delivery of your project objective, and also considered all reasonable mitigations to any ‘harm’ or loss of amenity that anyone directly affected may experience. This can be incredibly detailed. To put it into context - the team designing the Borders railway had comparatively few parties directly affected (a few dozen), but there was a small team who was in contact with every one of them regularly, and preparing designs / mitigations specifically to cover their concerns.
it is imperative that you have independent professional expert advice (‘consultants’) to demonstrate that the studies you have done have been independently assessed, proven to be the right solution, and therefore not just some monolithic corporation stamping over your back yard. You wouldn’t want to turn up to the public inquiry to find that an objector proves some of your info wrong, and bring down the whole project.
One very specific example - noise assessments. There’s plenty of people out there who can write you a report on noise assessments. But there is one, and only one, true expert on the subject. He has represented the promoters of HS2, Crossrail, HS1 (CTRL) and the Jubilee Line extension amongst others. I forget his daily rate but it is eye watering. But if you don’t get him, someone else will, and you will most likely lose the application. I use this as an example - there’s many other subjects that have to be considered in the same vein.
Given that I love to provide silly plans that technically meet our objectives..... what happens if we just stop every single train at Welwyn North?
Post HS2 and all. Once ETS is in place we might be able to get more than 18 trains per hour!
If the platforms were long enough for every train, and there was ETCS with ATO, and you were willing to stop the long distance services (at a cost of 5-6 minutes each), and didn’t want any more long distance services (unlikely) ... with the dwell times of the Class 800s you might just get 20tph in.