brad465
Established Member
Does delaying actually save costs? I recall reading further back that it only increases them as inflation accumulates further.
It spreads the costs over a longer period, important for political things (but also can make the borrowing costs easier to negotiate). However yes inflation won't help.Does delaying actually save costs? I recall reading further back that it only increases them as inflation accumulates further.
No, but it does defer "peak spend" on HS2 which looks to be untenable at the inflated rate now likely.Does delaying actually save costs? I recall reading further back that it only increases them as inflation accumulates further.
Do they not know how inflation works?
It'll never be cheaper than now to build it
By Birmingham, I presume you mean Phase 1. Given that the earthworks are well underway up to the WCML join at Handsacre I can possibly see it stopping at Curzon St regardless of finances![]()
HS2 line between Birmingham and Crewe delayed by two years
Government blames soaring construction prices but says it is "committed" to the high speed rail link.www.bbc.co.uk
As I kinda expected, it's definitely going to Birmingham and likely never any further.
It allows the Treasury to make a red box on their spreadsheet go green, which is all they really care about.Does delaying actually save costs? I recall reading further back that it only increases them as inflation accumulates further.
the government should consider making changes to the scheme to remove the Handsacre connecton, and investgate how best to maintain or improve services on the WCML to Stoke-on-Trent, Staford and Macclesfeld (without HS2). The Review considers that the Handsacre connecton would only be needed if it was decided not to proceed with Phase 2a to Crewe
Yes the vandalism has already been done, just build the original Phase 1.How much would that cost in terms of compensation for cancelled contracts, clearing/demolishing work already started and loss of jobs?
As an outsider I assume there's probably too much been done already which makes it difficult to cancel now. Unless tunnels and whatever can be used for rail/roads etc I don't know. And again as an outsider, if it's just Birmingham - Old Oak or even Crewe - Old Oak then it's of zero use to me, I'll probably die before completion, whereas if the thing had never been started the money could have been spent on current rail improvements...and have some left over??Do you genuinely believe that scrapping it now would be a good idea? If so, please explain why.
I appreciate that you might not have wanted it built in the first place, but we are where we are.
whereas if the thing had never been started the money could have been spent on current rail improvements...and have some left over??
Where do the extra trains that building the northern bits first go?Those of us who have always been of the opinion HS2 was not needed, and going to cost many many times more ££££££££££s than the original estimate have been proved correct. Those of us who wanted construction of the line to start from both ends Birmingham to Leeds and Manchester have also been proved correct. So much for "levelling up", more wealth transferred from the north to the south via HS2. Highly like the line will revert to its original Phase 1 plan, stop HS2 construction at Handsacre and link it to the WCML as originally planned. (er).
Nail... Head.We run the risk of HS2 becoming a London-Birmingham exclusive white elephant...
Except of BCR will now be skewed by the fact that it's not a follow on project, so all the wind down of contracts etc will have to be brought back to speed. Make no mistake, this is the beginning of the end for HS2 as originally envisioned. Crewe can't be justified without Manchester and they're delaying Manchester further, this will only end in one outcome.It will all get built one way or the other eventually, because once the main trunk route from London to Handsacre is in place, extensions will have a high benefit on investment.
As with most infrastructure this delay will only compound the costs and stretching the construction out leads to a longer time of disruption for those living along the route. No one benefits from this.
Yes the vandalism has already been done, just build the original Phase 1.
It’s an awful lot of money spent to just extend a London commuting corridor up to Birmingham. It’s been obvious from the start that:
A.) The UK rail network desperately needs a proper high speed network
B.) The network needs to extend to the north west and north east, and be completed in its entirety, to feel the real benefits.
and C.) The government would screw it right up, the first phase would run massively over budget, and the rest of the project gets scaled back as a result.
We run the risk of HS2 becoming a London-Birmingham exclusive white elephant, an expensive monument to the UKs inability to do anything properly. So so frustrating.
Which would give us an expensive railway line which is of no use to the north of England or Scotland. To have any real benefit it has to go to Manchester and beyond. I'm sure all of the people demanding that it should be stopped at Birmingham would then complain that it only goes to Birmingham.
Between Birmingham and all the various HS2 destinations north of Birmingham, one presumes.Where do the extra trains that building the northern bits first go?
HS2 should have been a multi-project programme rather than a single project. That's the fundamental problem - it's become this single "thing" rather than a general programme. Can we imagine if the motorway network had been planned as a single project?We run the risk of HS2 becoming a London-Birmingham exclusive white elephant, an expensive monument to the UKs inability to do anything properly. So so frustrating.
Have any main construction contracts been let for the Crewe section?Except of BCR will now be skewed by the fact that it's not a follow on project, so all the wind down of contracts etc will have to be brought back to speed. Make no mistake, this is the beginning of the end for HS2 as originally envisioned. Crewe can't be justified without Manchester and they're delaying Manchester further, this will only end in one outcome.
So not onwards to London, so you are still building a chunk of phase 1 to enable that anyway.Between Birmingham and all the various HS2 destinations north of Birmingham, one presumes.
No, just enabling contracts (land purchase, utility diversion, work site setup, detailed design etc).Have any main construction contracts been let for the Crewe section?
If phase 2a goes then say goodbye to anything at Crewe itself as well. The 1980s layout will just get sweated more.No, just enabling contracts (land purchase, utility diversion, work site setup, detailed design etc).
Main civils contracts are due later this year I think.
Yes, but politically it would have been a much easier sell to people who think that the South/London gets everything at the expense of the North.So not onwards to London, so you are still building a chunk of phase 1 to enable that anyway.
I predicted years ago that this would be the result. Birmingham would just become a commuter town for London, because nobody can afford to live in London anymore.We run the risk of HS2 becoming a London-Birmingham exclusive white elephant,
Where do the extra trains that building the northern bits first go?