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Lobby groups unite for London rail link



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Published Date: 06 July 2008
SCOTTISH business groups are planning a joint campaign to back plans for a £30bn high-speed rail link between London and Scotland.

The country's main business organisations, including the Scottish Chambers of Commerce, the CBI, the Institute of Directors and the Federation of Small Businesses, will meet in Glasgow on Friday to mastermind the campaign which will press for a new
rail line capable of cutting journey times between London and Edinburgh to three hours. Also involved will be Scottish Financial Enterprise, Virgin Trains and the Edinburgh and Glasgow Chambers of Commerce.

The groups want both Westminster and Holyrood to pursue serious research into the feasibility and cost benefits of a separate line after rail minister Tom Harris and SNP transport minister Stewart Stevenson met to discuss the idea for the first time at the end of May. Although the meeting was seen as an important step forward in the plans, sources close to the negotiations say little has been achieved since, and Westminster would rather fund improvements to the current rail network.

The business groups have decided to put on a rare united front as they say a separate line, capable of accommodating Eurostar trains, would significantly improve Scotland's ability to do business with the rest of the UK, as well as continental Europe.

They argue that faster rail travel is particularly important after British Airways announced plans to axe its early morning flights from Glasgow at the end of last month - a move which many fear other airlines will soon follow.

Andy Willox, Scottish policy convener of the FSB in Scotland, said: "Good transport infrastructure is vital to the health of an economy – they're not called arterial routes for nothing. And Scotland's poor links to the rest of the country are harming our competitiveness. How can we compete for contracts with companies based in, say, London, if we can't get to a 9am meeting without the leaving the night before?"

Graham Bell, spokesman for the Scottish and Edinburgh chambers of commerce, said research suggests that for every pound invested in the project, the UK would receive £2.50 back in increased income. "The beauty of this thing is that it provides cross-border benefit."

He said it was inexcusable that in the same time the UK had built a 92km high-speed stretch between London and the channel tunnel, Spain has constructed a 1,900km high-speed network.

Bell added that the private sector was likely to make a financial contribution. "It has to be a partnership between the public and private sectors," he said.





The full article contains 434 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 05 July 2008 2:00 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: The railways
 
1

danielrober,

06/07/2008 09:16:22
Good news.
2

The Ghost of Sir William Arrol,

The Forthy Bridge 06/07/2008 12:00:22
Our short sighted politicians (sadly) are much more interested in their John Lewis shopping list of political vanity projects. Never thinking more than an opinion poll ahead.

Awash with North Sea oil revenues, billions raided from pension funds and increased indirect taxes we should have the best infrastructure in the world; Infrastructure ready for a post oil economy.

Instead, we've not one, but two very expensive wars on the go, nuclear weapons that'll never be needed, warships being built that won't have fuel to make them go: all symbols of power and vanity to pretend at an international level that UK plc is still a world power.

As far as transport is concerned, we have built roads and airports everywhere that will shortly stand idle as ATF, petrol and diesel becomes in scarce supply and not affordable.

The government really has been wrong footed on this. The previous government electrified 1km of railway a month while in power, this government have electrified a grand total of 3km. Approximately 1/4 km/year.

They've fiddled and clung to belief in the old order while there's been a fundamental shift of energy supply and power. Now the UK is ill prepared for the future. By the time government realise a change in direction for more sustainable transport is needed it will be too late. After peak oil the cost of construction of high-speed lines will be crippling. The French and Japanese built their infrastructure at oil costs of $10/bbl. We'll build ours with oil at $200+!

The lack of ambition, lack of vision, is simply stunning.
3

danielrober,

06/07/2008 16:04:19
# 2

I can agree with what your saying, money has been burnt, as running costs have been covered by capital funds. Now everyone seems to have become used to the large grant to solve problems.

But perhaps we can learn from our, only recent mistakes, such as the new crossing of the Firth of Forth. We could have a tendering process to see who has the best 'idea' for the high speed link.

Is it a TGV, Maglev, TALAC or something else? Lets the bidding process begin. It will be fun.

 

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