I appreciate that many on the Forum have an obsession with re-opening old routes through scenic parts of the country well way from any large conurbation (e.g. over five hundred posts in the thread about Aberystwyth to Carmarthen), but even by such standards this is a weak case.
If the freight argument is so strong then when was the last freight train from Dumfries to Stranraer? Or even from Glasgow to Stranraer? What's stopping someone running rail freight today via Kilmarnock (with a short siding to Cairnryan, which you'd have to build anyway)? Could it be the absolute lack of any sensible business case?
Does anyone really think people in Stranraer will be willing to put up with a four hour round trip on the train to work in Dumfries every day? Just how many jobs will there be in Dumfries to attract people?
Ayr is roughly the same size as Dumfries, though a little closer to Stranraer - how many commuters are there between the two places?
Ah, back to the " 'snot fair " argument.
Generally a sign that every other argument is weak.
No. Generally a sign that transport spending should be spent evenly throughout the country.
I completetely disagree.
Transport spending should be focussed on areas where there is real (and quantifiable untapped) demand.
You wouldn't spend the same money on flood defences in every county, you wouldn't spend the same money on motorways in every county - you prioritise spending to where it is needed.
How much is the subsidy per passenger on the Borders line ??
Interesting question.
From all the comments enthusiasts make about the "success" of the project, you'd assume it was making a profit, but I retain a healthy scepticism in that regard...
What was the BCR calculation for the Borders line ?
The line wasn't built because it had a good BCR, it was built as the price of the LibDems propping up a minority Labour administration at Holyrood.
That's why the "beating passenger forecasts" guff should be taken with a pinch of salt, because the line wasn't built because of a healthy business case, it was built because of political pork-barrelling.
The line is a strategic link between the north of Ireland, Scotland and northern England
"Strategic link" tends to be used on this Forum as a straw-clutching exercise, along with "useful as a diversionary line on a couple of weekends a year", "unquantifiable social benefits" and "would put Insert Town Name Here on the map".
Flimsy.
I repeat, there's 57,000 people in Galloway, not 'nobody overall'
...spread over a fairly wide area (i.e. the kind of population density unsuited to mass transportation.
How long does Belfast-Heysham take ?
The question should be "how long does Belfast - Heysham - Manchester/ London take" - since the vast majority of the lorries on the A75 are going beyond Dumfries and down the M6.
Dumfries and Galloway attractions ? google it, you'll be surprised
Oh there are some tourist attractions, but nothing "big league"
(look at how pretty much everything that brings in the big numbers is either in the central belt or Highlands - e.g.
https://www.visitscotland.com/blog/culture/most-visited/ )
So your quote about D&G "voted top tourist destination in Scotland" is either some internet poll that has no bearing on reality or is a little disingenuous.
Let me add a little from a Northern Ireland perspective...
There's no way that such a rail link would be useful for NI based freight.
Most of the goods coming into NI are delivered by truck and the systems in place for that are very efficient. The unaccompanied trailer model works fantastically well - if you are ever nearby just look at the trailer staging areas at the Cairnryan and Heysham.
If you're not familiar with this, essentially it means a mainland driver hauls a trailer as far as the port, drops it off at the port and picks up another that arrived on the last sailing. They then take that off wherever they need to go. It makes scheduling straightforward and you don't have the truck drivers wasting their time on a ferry.
Loading/unloading of the trailers is incredibly quick. All it needs are a few little tractor units to move the trailers around. There are very low infrastructure costs involved.
Transhipment of goods off a ferry, then to a loading yard some miles away, then loading them onto a train that has a fixed, probably only a few times a day, schedule, unloading them from the train and onto a truck for final delivery is inefficient and costly. That's assuming the goods are nicely containerised and easy to handle.
The time and cost of using a short rail link for freight will be far to high.
As for NI passengers - it's quicker, easier and invariably cheaper to fly. This is the modal shift of the last 20 years. In the past the SailRail train to the ferries were packed. Now each SailRail connecting coach service has a tiny number of passengers. (That's from observations of many trips myself)
"Quicker" is key. Assuming I leave my building here in Belfast I can get a taxi to either airport, checkin, fly and reach almost any UK destination before the ferry leaving at a comparable time would have docked in Scotland.
The foot passenger market has gone and there are vanishingly few passengers who would travel NI - ferry - train through Carlisle to points east or south. A new railway from Stranraer to Carlisle via Dumfries is not going to make any change. Perhaps there would be the opportunity to get the passengers off the 2 or 3 coaches a day that go that route but it's not big numbers.
So, if you're looking for a new railway it's not going to have much justification from strategic long distance NI traffic. Instead you're looking solely at the local population and as almost everyone else says - it just isn't enough and it's too widely dispersed.
Sorry to be negative about ideas but realism does need to come into it...
Mr Toad
^ probably the most interesting contribution to the thread - factual, informative, realistic.
I didn't know about the unaccompanied trailer model, but can see that it's a great idea.