Me too. The comments on here make anyone with rail interests at heart are just depressing. It seems everything rail is "difficult" in the UK. Always a reason (usually money) when something entirely sensible can't be done. The huge Heinz factory, and others like it, would be rail connected in just about every country on the continent, but not in the UK apparently
You may think it's "entirely sensible" but it's also going to cost over ten million pounds, if experience elsewhere is an indicator, so who would you like to pay for that?
The taxpayer, at a time when we are struggling to pay for the slump we have been in?
Heinz, on the assumption that this "trial" will be a huge success in the long term (that's quite a big sum, which will put companies off such trials in future)? Especially given that one reason that firms like Heinz make money is because they move operations around the country/ between countries to try to trim costs (or threaten to make such moves) - there's no guarantee that any food factory will still be in its current location in five/ten years time, but the economics of a siding may mean it takes longer to pay off.
I'm sure we'd all like to see this factory (and others) connected to the railway, but what's your solution?
With more joined up thinking NR (or their predecessors) would have built a few speculative industrial 'boxes' with rail access in locations where old railway siding infrastructure and major roads met. Probably all the spare land near to roads has been sold off to Barratt Homes by now.
If this were the situation then you'd possibly make more money selling the land off to Barratt (given that companies like Heinz will want the right size of "box" as a priority, and probably a suitable labour market and good road access before they worry about a railway siding
Infrequent wagon loads v. frequent train loads! The economics differ greatly.
Agreed