When I heard yesterday - first from Rail Technology Magazine and then from the Consortium website I asked the Consortium what the facts were about phase 2 (the Western Section) and expressed concern that there was no mention of the subsequent phase, Bedford to Cambridge (the Central Section). I received the following reply:
Bedford BC - OFFICIAL-Unsecure
Dear Mr Gregory
Thank you for your email. We too are concerned at the potential delay to East West Rail, though final decisions are yet to be taken so we still have an opportunity to influence the outcome.
I suggest you write to your local MP and council leader. There will be more news coverage in the local press, on TV and radio this week, so you may wish to write to the newspapers in response to articles that appear. Are you connected to any business groups? Support from business leaders, owners and groups will be most helpful as we press the case for East West Rail.
I am interested in where you are based and what is your interest in East West Rail. The development work to identify the single preferred route of the Central Section is continuing apace, however, the case for the Central Section will be massively strengthened by the timely delivery of the Western Section.
If you have not already done so, please subscribe for email updates on EastWestRail.org.uk, so you will receive updates as and when there is news.
Thank you for getting in touch and for your support.
Kind regards
Caryl Jones
Communications Manager
East West Rail Consortium
So the actions for those of us who care that this project advance quickly and that it really links up East with West are clear.
It would seem that the Hendy review will reschedule a significant number of projects. It will presumably also highlight the underlying factors that are giving rise to these delays, which have of course been extensively discussed both in this thread and elsewhere in this forum.
This is Hendy alright, it will nark the anti HS2 people too as it is likely they will go in and do a lot of prelim and actual work for bits of E-W. Can't see trains before 21 myself now.
There's no real shortage of permanent way contractors who can do the basic work - installing drainage, putting down the weed proof membranes, laying ballast and such like.
What there is a chronic shortage of is signalling engineers and electrification engineers, so the track can relatively easily be put into place, but it can't be connected up to the rest of the network.
The other factor not mentioned in this particular thread but discussed elsewhere is the fact that Network Rail is now much more constrained in its access to capital than it was previously. In other words, it cannot spend itself out of trouble!
The warning signs concerning East-West were already apparent in another context, the concerns raised by the ORR:
One detail in the ORR findings which distinctly worries me is the significant overspend on the East-West project even before phase 2 (Bicester to Bletchley) gets really started. That suggests that the Oxford to Marylebone "new" railway has cost a lot more than it ought to have done. Why? And what can be done to reduce costs on future projects?
Concerning East-West rail, the ORR has had positive things to say:
ORR has however also engaged with projects which will deliver on time and without the issues described in this section of the report. East West Rail phase 2 is an example where there has been positive engagement with ORR and NRAP since early 2014. The timetable for authorisation remains achievable. The project has been proactive in understanding where other projects have had difficulties and is learning from them.
But among the negatives which it applies to this particular project among others are:
NR has a critical role in these cross industry programmes, but it does not have a framework or programme lifecycle setting out how NR should be organised, governed and managed. Each major NR scheme appears to start from a blank piece of paper, with assumptions not adequately tested by timetable and performance modelling before infrastructure requirements are set; the management of programme-wide risks, assumptions and interdependencies are developed too late.
Additionally, there would appear to be a significant cost overrun already associated with East-West Rail.