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Late and over budget, but rail link back on track



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Published Date: 14 May 2008
IT IS regarded by ministers as one of the most important railway projects in Scotland for decades, but when it is officially opened tomorrow it will be two and a half years late and cost more than double the expected price tag.
The Stirling-Alloa-Kincardine line is just 13 miles of mainly single-track line, but will cost the taxpayer £85 million.

The first train is also a long time coming. Despite having been approved in 2004 – the first rail project after devolution – p
assengers will get their first taste of the service next Monday, when they should have been using it three Christmases ago.

While rail industry chiefs will hail the project's completion at a ceremony at Alloa station tomorrow morning, experts have warned that it has potentially serious implications for the Scottish Government's plans for other new rail lines. These include routes between Edinburgh and the Borders, and from Glasgow to the city's main airport.

The Alloa scheme was conceived to free more space on key commuter lines by creating a direct route for slow coal trains traversing the Central Belt from Hunterston port in Ayrshire to Longannet power station, near Kincardine in Fife. Taking the 45mph trains off the main Edinburgh-Glasgow express line and the Forth Bridge, where they slow to 20mph, is expected to improve passenger train punctuality and free space to enable services from Edinburgh to both Aberdeen and Perth to double in frequency from December.

In addition, hourly passenger trains will run on the western half of the new line, between Stirling and Alloa, restoring rail travel to Clackmannanshire after a gap of 40 years. Direct trains will run to Glasgow, with passengers changing at Stirling for Edinburgh.

Annual passenger projections have more than doubled on earlier estimates, with 155,000 expected to travel in the first year, rising to 245,000 within three years.

Scott Prentice, the senior project manager for Transport Scotland, said: "The business case for the line was a more efficient route for coal trains, but the absolute beauty of the project is that it provides passenger trains to Alloa at marginal extra cost."

Clackmannanshire Council said housebuilding had boomed because of the line, with property prices rising by 135 per cent – higher than the rest of Scotland – over the last five years.

Locals flocked to bridges along the route to see the first coal train on a test trip last month, and a straw poll yesterday found a generally warm welcome for the line in Alloa, with people saying they would use the new service.

Margaret Downie, who remembers the station being closed in 1968, said: "It's going to be a great thing and should help businesses. The line should never have been closed, and we have lost a lot of industry since."

Charlotte Ross, who has also lived in the town since the railway was closed, said: "It is great that it's coming back to Alloa – it will be good for the town to have the train back."

Roderick Mackenzie, from nearby Tullibody, said: "I normally drive to Stirling to get a train to Edinburgh or Glasgow, but the car park is very congested, so this will make getting the train much easier."

Jackie Burns, another Alloa resident, said any such development was a good thing, but she doubted whether the £85 million cost was money well spent.

Alexandra Hutton said: "It will be good for people not to have to travel by car," while Florence McGregor said: "It will take traffic off the roads. Everything seems to double in price these days."

However, the rosy outlook masks the project's unhappy gestation, and industry experts said lessons must be learned.

The scheme was originally run by Clackmannanshire Council – Scotland's smallest local authority with no rail experience. A series of other bodies then became involved before Scottish Government's Transport Scotland agency took it over to complete the job last year.

Along the way, a catalogue of cost increases and delays has been caused by apparently unforeseen problems or changes, which have seen costs soar from an original £37 million.

Major factors included the stabilisation of old mineworkings costing up to four times original expectations, the design of a level crossing being changed at a late stage, difficulties with integrating the line with existing signalling and wrangles over compensation for landowners.

To cap it all, there were also plans for extra charges for coal trains so they contributed to the cost of the line – leading the railfreight firm EWS to threaten to boycott the route until the tolls were dropped.

Dr Jon Shaw, the director of the Centre for Sustainable Transport at Plymouth University, said streamlined project management was required.

He said: "Rail projects cost up to 40 per cent more in Britain than the rest of Europe, as they have done for a century. The cost of the Borders line is going to shoot up and I expect the Glasgow airport rail link to cost more too.

"The way they are run is too complicated, so the best thing would be for them to come under much tighter Transport Scotland control. The agency should also control Network Rail's infrastructure as well as its spending."

David Bytheway, who is writing a book on the project, said: "This project shows that the organisational structure should have been simplified and all costs been made known at the start."

Derek Halden, a consultant involved in feasibility work for the Alloa line, said: "It is still not clear who is responsible to the taxpayer for the costs of the scheme. Transport Scotland pays the bills, but Network Rail is responsible for the specification. With the mismatch of accountability and responsibility it is hardly surprising that the costs have risen."

Bill Reeve, Transport Scotland's director of rail delivery, said: "As one of the first significant rail infrastructure projects in Scotland for many years, there were always going to be valuable lessons to be learned. A key lesson is that client organisations need expertise and experience. Transport Scotland was created to meet that need."

Mr Reeve agreed the governance of the project was over-complex and resulted in slow decision making. He said such lessons had been incorporated into other major rail projects.





The full article contains 1048 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 13 May 2008 9:29 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: The railways
 
1

truthsleuth,

14/05/2008 00:40:20
Cost escalation was no more than that on equivalent road builds.
The second Forth ROAD bridge cost has escalated in price far more than this rail scheme and it has not yet left the 'Planners Dream' (nightmare) stage.

Its about time the media gave a more equal focus on road scheme costs.
2

Navvy,

14/05/2008 05:32:03
And when will Longannet Power Station Close?
3

D Napier,

14/05/2008 06:04:36
Now we need to get on with the Borders rail link and the reopening of the lines to Leven and St Andrews.
4

Boy Wonder,

14/05/2008 07:24:07
I think we should outsource the building of rail-links, roadlinks, bridges etc ... to the Chinese. Much as I dislike their Govt ... they do manage to get such things built much cheaper!
5

Rulesbutnotrulers,

Federation, not separation 14/05/2008 07:39:18
With petrol prices sky rocketing we'll soon by needing coal powered steam trains all over Scotland once more.

Let's get on with it and cancel that Forth Bridge for starters as no one will be using cars by the time it's built.

Galashiels and St Andrews by train again. Yes!
6

Kate,

Zurich 14/05/2008 07:53:42
Late and over budget, but rail link back on track. I'm sorry, but since when does a project that is late and way over budget get classed as "0n track"? Deadlines and budgets are not drawn in the sand to await the next tide. They are fixed with a margin for error; however, it seems the margin for error with much of Scotland's planning is an immeasurable piece of string!
7

carrottop,

Dumfries 14/05/2008 08:10:01
Good idea but as all the industry has been taken out of Alloa whats the point in going there or is it one way tickets only.
8

Danny Mather,

Edinburgh 14/05/2008 08:13:22
"David Bytheway". Really?
9

Observer, formerly resident,

14/05/2008 08:35:10
The article says “Annual passenger projections have more than doubled on earlier estimates, with 155,000 expected to travel in the first year, rising to 245,000 within three years.” Every success to it!

But will it have the capacity? It’s noticeable that the line has been rebuilt as mostly single track on a former double-track alignment (i.e. the former Stirling – Dunfermline main line, which, at the time of its closure, gave a journey time of just 34 minutes between these centres). One wonders if the location of some of the new drainage and signalling works, which appear to encroach on the former track-bed, would have implications for any future re-doubling to accommodate additional or more frequent services.

It is perhaps also unfortunate that the new Alloa station has been built just east of the former junction with the Devon Valley line. Thus, any future extension of services to the Hillfoots, Tillicoultry and Dollar would require moving the new Alloa station back to the original position!

Still, glad to see it’s now complete.
10

jdships,

14/05/2008 08:47:09
Great to see this link up and running.
Serious question.
Anyone know when the last major Scottish project was delivered on time ?

6 Kate,Zurich put's it in a nutshell !!
11

Massive,

Gorebridge 14/05/2008 08:55:57
#1 Very good point, nobody ever complains about the escallating costs of new road projects. It's good to see the first rail project completed and we now need to see more action on the others. The Borders line has been put back by two years because of the lack of organisation of the councils, so let's hope Transport Scotland can pull everything together. The more they drag their heels, the higher the costs will rise. With the cost of fuel increasing at such an alarming rate,I'm sure plenty of people in the Borders will be very glad to have a train service again to save the expense and stress of driving in to Edinburgh every day - I know I will.
12

Alan B,

14/05/2008 10:37:27
It seems to me part of the problem with train projects is the structure. Why are trains controlled by the sp but track by westminster? Why does the sp fund track infrastructure projects on a track structure it does not control. It seem barmy. A good start would be to devolve all train and track stuff to the sp.
13

Dougie, Edinburgh,

14/05/2008 11:58:13
#4
Miniscule labour costs; minimal environmental standards, dubious quality control and unlikely compensation for homes bulldozed out the road. They also run their prisons, hospitals and schools cheaper than we can :)
14

,

14/05/2008 12:10:18
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
15

Jo,

Edinburgh 14/05/2008 14:53:33
Contrary to what the article states, the reopening of this line is considerably more than 2 1/2 years late: it was proposed for reopening as a high priority by Central Regional Council back in the early 1990s! Sadly, rail privatisation, and the abolition of the regions, put paid to the plan at that time.

I wonder what the decade-plus delay has cost Alloa and Clackmannanshire in the meantime in terms of missed business investment and population flight? Let's hope that the railway reopening helps to boost the fortunes of the town.
16

Andrew,

14/05/2008 15:52:30
THEN extend the passenger service through to Clackmannan, Kincardine, Culross, Valleyfield to Dunfermline Town (reverse), thence Inverkeithing, Haymarket & Edinburgh. Hardly rocket science!
17

scotsdoc,

NANAIMO 14/05/2008 22:35:18
Wonderful.....now how about Eskbank Bonnyrig Pomathorn and Peebles being opened up again?

And perhaps a commuter line out from St Leonards by Millarhill, Loanhead and Pennicuik?

If gasoline and diesel do go sky high a heck of a lot of people will be looking for transportation!

 

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