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Re: Electrification of the railways

Sort of off topic but still to do with trains. I was in Palermo recently and the city has an underground metro system which starts overground in the central station and then goes underground serving the local community and tourists. How feasible would this be in Cardiff? By say connecting the systems up electrically but having the trains from the valleys submerge and enter into a metro system. The trains in Cardiff hold up a lot of land, look at Cathays and Queens Street for example, and then expansion could be done under the river connecting east and west, north and south. I know that Cardiff as an incredibly high water board but it's something to think about.

Re: Electrification of the railways

SP - mentioned tunnels to some Network Rail engineers on a different project and hugely expensive and never really considered for cardiff as the demand etc is not there.

Jantra _ I try so hard to help you out, answer questions, assist you in your deliberations, but your all over the place as MR A has shown. I have never said the evidence is there for the valleys line elctrification, not having looked has anyone else, but we have inferred the benefist from other similair schemes, I presume as you did from the posts Mr A quotes.
Sit back a bit, don't bite, read whats said, deliberate and respoind with considered thought. when you do, you come up with good points, but like i said its wheat and chaff

Re: Electrification of the railways

It is pie in the sky, but as a reaction to Palermo's underground it's rival city of Catania has a built one, it is the world's smallest metro but still it's there. On the mainland it is the done thing for cities to have undergrounds and an extensive public transport system. Even Bilbao has an underground.

Re: Electrification of the railways

eric

Jantra _ I try so hard to help you out, answer questions, assist you in your deliberations, but your all over the place as MR A has shown. I have never said the evidence is there for the valleys line elctrification, not having looked has anyone else, but we have inferred the benefist from other similair schemes, I presume as you did from the posts Mr A quotes.
Sit back a bit, don't bite, read whats said, deliberate and respoind with considered thought. when you do, you come up with good points, but like i said its wheat and chaff


Eric

good morning to you

I do read your posts and get the general gist of what is being stated. In this thread I asked what the economic benefits were, because as far as I could see, there were none (thus quantified).

Rather than suggesting that we have no idea if there are any benefits because the analysis hasn't yet been undertaken, I was told there has to be benefits because similar schemes say so. I refer to my post about unobserved trees. The point being that each project is different and has its own parameters and metrics. Valleys electrification is an entirely different project to cross rail (as an example). Thus to cite cross rail as evidence that valleys electrification will deliver commensurate benefits in my opinion is absurd. they are about as far apart as can possibly be. the only similarity is they deliver a form of travel on tracks. everything else about it is different.

you will see through this thread I have agreed that such schemes may improve quality of life - I'd agree with that statement on the basis that its common sense. What I will not do is accept that there are other benefits without evidence, without analysis, just because there have been projects that have delivered benefits (or are forecast to deliver benefits) - projects which are almost entirely different in nature and scope.

I do hope they valley lines go ahead, I do hope they bring economic benefits to Wales - really genuinely want that to happen - but saying it is going to happen on the back of projects happening in other areas is my view is very short-sighted and lacks any form of credibility.

Re: Electrification of the railways

so you do now agree that some infrastructuire projects can have productivity benefits and that was my aim. Bring it back to the valleys which we all agree on as much as you want, my point was the productivity point. The case rests.
Small steps, but you are coming along, well done old chum. By Xmas we may have some positivity out of the old dog.

Re: Electrification of the railways

UK government spends more on Tottenham Court Road station upgrade than on electrification of Welsh Railways shock! Whoda thunk it?
http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/2012/05/26/uk-government-spends-more-on-tottenham-court-road-tube-station-upgrade-than-wales-electrification-91466-31048014/

Re: Electrification of the railways

How much was spent on king's X station, Euston, St Pancras?
Its fucking unbelievable.
The catastrophe of having weak politicians in Wales

Re: Electrification of the railways

Ci Snoop
How much was spent on king's X station, Euston, St Pancras?
Its fucking unbelievable.
The catastrophe of having weak politicians in Wales

St Pancras station redevelopment £800 million
Kings Cross redevelopment £500 million
(London Bridge Station redevlopment) part of Thameslink upgrade which is £6 billion!
Crossrail £15.9 billion
HS1 (excluding St Pancras redevelopment) £5 billion
(Euston Station redevlopment) part of HS2 phase 1 £17.4 billion
Paddington Station redevelopment 1998 £65 million
Waterloo international £170 million

So that's £28.44 BILLION already spent/allocated in the last 20 years on rail lines and stations for London. This excludes all tube,DLR,tramlink and local train service infrastructure spending,which has been considerable and also the £17.4 billion earmarked for HS2.
If one assumes that about 20 million people live in the London area, compared to about 2 million in South Wales, we should have had about £3 billion spent on our lines and stations over the last 20 years,if we were being treated fairly.We have had/will have:
Queen st and other proposed upgrade £30 million
Cardiff Central upgrade 1999 £12 million
Newport Station upgrade £22 million
The EV line £33 million
The VOG line £17 million
Total £114 million
We have had £400 million spent on a signalling upgrade, but London (and the rest of the UK) have had far bigger amounts spent on the same programme. So in terms of station redevelopment and new lines we have had £114 million spent in about the last 20 years, which is 0.4% of the total spent in and around London, even though we have 10% of their numbers of people. Not fair.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Interesting article from "Click on Wales" regarding the possible electrification of the S. wales rail network:

http://www.clickonwales.org/2012/05/critical-moment-for-the-cardiff-and-valleys-metro/

Apologies if posted eleswhere.

Re: Electrification of the railways

On the train to Paddington recently I was struck by massive rail/station construction going on at Reading station. They seem to be doubling the station width (already bigger and busier than Cardiff Central) and laying what looked like possibly up to ten lines of new track for what seemed about a mile and a half on the western approach to the station with somewhat less (but still major work by South Wales standards) on the eastern approach. Anyone know what's going on there? Western terminus of Crossrail, perhaps? It obviously takes more than a few bus-shelter type platforms to keep Royal Berkshire happy!

Re: Electrification of the railways

Ian, Bridgend
On the train to Paddington recently I was struck by massive rail/station construction going on at Reading station. They seem to be doubling the station width (already bigger and busier than Cardiff Central) and laying what looked like possibly up to ten lines of new track for what seemed about a mile and a half on the western approach to the station with somewhat less (but still major work by South Wales standards) on the eastern approach. Anyone know what's going on there? Western terminus of Crossrail, perhaps? It obviously takes more than a few bus-shelter type platforms to keep Royal Berkshire happy!

This £850 million(!!!!!) development is to increase capacity. Crossrail ends in Maidenhead but this work will allow it to be extended to Reading in the future. So, Reading station alone has had 8 times as much spent on intrastructure improvement in the last 10 years as the whole of south Wales has had in the last 20 years. I wonder why?.......Reading station handles 14 million passengers per annum, Cardiff Central handles 11 million, Queen St handles 2.5 million. So between our two stations, they deal with roughly the same number of people every year. I can't really understand why we haven't had similar levels of investment. The shameful fact is that our stations hace had 6% of the investment Reading station has received

Re: Electrification of the railways

I'm grateful for that information, Mr Appeasement. It's going to take more than a few more plastic shelters on lonely platforms to match that kind of investment! We appear to be at the outer limit of the scattering of crumbs from the high table. Cardiff General's last real increase in capacity was in the 30's. Since then they've cut out the Riverside platforms, added a silly Platform "0" and a few dabs of paint for Cup Final crowds. For a capital city the station's an embarrassment - from the south side it could be any minor London suburban station. Why didn't they invest in an overall glass roof at the height of the huge railway activity which went on in Cardiff back in the early 20th century? I know that such roofs are no longer necessary these days but at least we'd have offered newcomers the residual grandeur of a busy major city station. Central handles more passengers than Temple Meads but there's no comparison between the impact of the two stations. Even York, Darlington, Carlisle and Hull stations make stronger statements than Cardiff Central. If Taff Vale and GWR hadn't been separate companies maybe we'd have had a great combined station serving all directions with a dignity worthy of our city.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Ian, Bridgend
Why didn't they invest in an overall glass roof at the height of the huge railway activity which went on in Cardiff back in the early 20th century?... If Taff Vale and GWR hadn't been separate companies maybe we'd have had a great combined station serving all directions with a dignity worthy of our city.


An interesting question even if it does take us slightly off topic! There are a few reasons for the station's relative modesty I think.

The first is the one that you note - that Cardiff was served by a number of different companies - not just the TVR and GWR, but also the Rhymney, the Barry & the Cardiff Rail companies. Not all these companies ran trains into Cardiff General / Central and apart from GWR their primary business was freight. Passengers were very much a secondary concern.

The other reason was that Cardiff General wasn't a Terminus station for any of these lines. Unlike Bristol Cardiff was an intermediate, albeit an important intermediate stop.

Add to all that the way the UK's public and private investment was - and still is - skewed towards London and the south east of England and you have your explanation.

Re: Electrification of the railways

@MrAppeasement

thats a very good overview and does bring how the inequality in terms of rail. to give the argument balance, I think we should also look at the GVA/GDP of London compared to Wales on a per capita basis as well as look at what spend Wales gets in other areas such as say welfare and benefits compared to London.

My gut feel is that we get a far higher percentage in benefits and welfare (as an example) thus we're not being hard done by, we are just spending it on other things. I think the funding per capita under Barnett would go some way in proving this.

One solution then is for us to request less is spent on welfare and benefits and more on infrastructure. good luck to the politician who suggests that in Wales.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Jantra
@MrAppeasement

thats a very good overview and does bring how the inequality in terms of rail. to give the argument balance, I think we should also look at the GVA/GDP of London compared to Wales on a per capita basis as well as look at what spend Wales gets in other areas such as say welfare and benefits compared to London.

My gut feel is that we get a far higher percentage in benefits and welfare (as an example) thus we're not being hard done by, we are just spending it on other things. I think the funding per capita under Barnett would go some way in proving this.

One solution then is for us to request less is spent on welfare and benefits and more on infrastructure. good luck to the politician who suggests that in Wales.

Leaving aside the structural economic issues and the fact that benefit payments in London are proportionately huge because of housing benefit, rail infrastructure spending and welfare policy are not devolved areas.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Mr Appeasement
Reading station handles 14 million passengers per annum, Cardiff Central handles 11 million, Queen St handles 2.5 million.


it is shocking that Cardiff as one of the busiest UK stations outside of london does so badly in terms on overall infrastructure development. I don't really buy into the reason that it is because we are Welsh. Temple meads doesn't really have that much in the way of investment (although IIRC there is scope for significant investment in the pipeline).

I think the real reason is that there just isn't the money to create a world class rail network in the UK. Any world class infrastructure we are going to have is going to be based in and around London first and foremost. Fair - probably not, but it is financial common sense.

How many would be prepared to pay higher London/SE fares on the appalling ATW trains if it meant we would see an increase in the network comfort and capability? My opinion is that I doubt few in Wales would really want to pay more for a better service.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Mr Appeasement

Leaving aside the structural economic issues and the fact that benefit payments in London are proportionately huge because of housing benefit, rail infrastructure spending and welfare policy are not devolved areas.


i'm not saying they are. i'm saying that if there is a pot of money for each area of the UK then only so much can be done with that pot of money. If we need it to be spent on welfare in Wales then it means perhaps we get less spending on other things.

I am not talking about WG/Westminster in this, i am talking about the funding in general. we in Wales have a certain amount of public money that we can use for investment, whether it is spent by the Senedd or whitehall (or any of its agencies). Whilst it would be nice to have shiny new ice trains or the shinkansen between Merthyr and Cardiff, the fact is we have serious economic problems that mean our allocated funds are spent on other things.

The issue as you say is structural. we need jobs here in Wales but we need jobs that bring long term wealth to help us become far more sustainable. Public sector jobs don't do this hence why I am against an increase in the state in Wales. The only reason is because it places an ever increasing reliance on English money from Westminster, which is something I am against. i'd much prefer to see a Wales than could afford to look after itself entirely rather than rely on the Barnett subsidy.

when we get to that point (if we get to that point) then perhaps we can't start thinking about these infrastructure projects, but until that time, the Welsh share of public funds is spent on other things. We cannot have our cake and eat it.

Re: Electrification of the railways

i'm not saying they are. i'm saying that if there is a pot of money for each area of the UK then only so much can be done with that pot of money. If we need it to be spent on welfare in Wales then it means perhaps we get less spending on other things.


You do understand the difference between a revenue and a capital budget, yes? Are you sure you're an accountant?

Westminster does not adjust our Capital Budget to take account of the amount of benefits paid out in Wales. For starters, they almost certainly don't know what that figure is. Secondly, perhaps you've heard of the Barnett Formula?

Re: Electrification of the railways

Lyndon
i'm not saying they are. i'm saying that if there is a pot of money for each area of the UK then only so much can be done with that pot of money. If we need it to be spent on welfare in Wales then it means perhaps we get less spending on other things.


You do understand the difference between a revenue and a capital budget, yes? Are you sure you're an accountant?

Westminster does not adjust our Capital Budget to take account of the amount of benefits paid out in Wales. For starters, they almost certainly don't know what that figure is. Secondly, perhaps you've heard of the Barnett Formula?


he's off again.

the UK has a set amount of cash to spend on public services. it matters not if you call it capital or revenue, whatever the split, the total cash is the same. Wales will be allocated a certain amount of this cash, it will be allocated directly through WG (via Barnett) or indirectly through (via Westminster). Whatever the size of this cash pot is, the more that is spent on revenue (welfare, benefits etc) then less is available for capital (ie infrastructure).

Re: Electrification of the railways

reading redevelopment will have benefits to soth wales though, increasing travel time to london and reducing bottlenecks etc so not all bad for us - think WG were actually asked to pay for some of it!!

and without doubt london and gets a lot more, but those london stations deal in people volumes that cardiff can only dream of, Tottenham court road 200k plus a day. All that investment is good, but it needs to ensure other areas benfit too through consequential payments which currently are not dealt with properly.

Re: Electrification of the railways

eric
reading redevelopment will have benefits to soth wales though, increasing travel time to london and reducing bottlenecks etc so not all bad for us - think WG were actually asked to pay for some of it!!

and without doubt london and gets a lot more, but those london stations deal in people volumes that cardiff can only dream of, Tottenham court road 200k plus a day. All that investment is good, but it needs to ensure other areas benfit too through consequential payments which currently are not dealt with properly.


is that really a benefit

Re: Electrification of the railways

eric
London stations deal in people volumes that cardiff can only dream of


I'm going to take issue with that.

Over £500 million was spent by Network Rail on a bling redevelopment of King's Cross - which handled 28.4 million passengers a year in 2010-11. In the same year Cardiff Central dealt with 11.5 million.

Surely Central deserves better than a cheap and nasty entrance on the southern forecourt which is all Network Rail is planning.

The way public money is poured into vanity projects in London is a disgrace and unbalances the whole of the UK economy.

Re: Electrification of the railways

fair point, decreasing!
some 4 - 6 minutes i recall reading somewhere

damn you Jantra and your eagle eyedness

Re: Electrification of the railways

@Eric
I'm only pulling your chain, I knew what you meant (although some might say that taking longer to get to the smoke was actually a benefit )

@Ash
It may also have something to do with the number of operators out of the station. I do empathise with the claim that Welsh Rail is very much the poor relation, but we do need to remember that we have money spent on other things and we don't really contribute anywhere near as much to the pot as London. Is it correct that we expect the same type of train station that London can afford?

I do however agree that we do need to see a major structural change in the UK economy. The government could start by say locating the courts to M/cr, the MoD to Birmingham, HMT to Cardiff ....basically, wherever the government departments are, the industry will also be. There really is no need to have everything centralised in this day and age

Re: Electrification of the railways

ash, i agree, we get the short end of the stick, but the scale is on a different level, you pick one station Kings CRoss, and that is one of numerous in london, next door to Kings is ST Pancreas, and i'm pretty sure that with underground etc etc KIngs is well over 40 million pasengers a year? It needed doing and i again think the 500 million was part of a much larger regeneration project that included large private sector invoilvement in offices, retail and housing schemes.......cardiff could have that i presume but the latest farce in the CBD programme would put most developers off. Its all about the consequentials for me!!

Jantra, again agree

Re: Electrification of the railways

eric
ash, i agree, we get the short end of the stick, but the scale is on a different level, you pick one station Kings CRoss, and that is one of numerous in london, next door to Kings is ST Pancreas, and i'm pretty sure that with underground etc etc KIngs is well over 40 million pasengers a year? It needed doing and i again think the 500 million was part of a much larger regeneration project that included large private sector invoilvement in offices, retail and housing schemes.....


You're right about the wider redevelopment and the larger passenger figures if you include the Underground.

The figures I used were the Network Rail passenger numbers and the Network Rail share of the investment. I think its a fair comparison. You only need to look at pictures of the new King's Cross Western concourse to see that is was designed as a 'statement building' not as a cost-effective solution to congestion.

Re: Electrification of the railways

According to latest rumours, electrification of GWR from Paddington to Swansea and the core Valleys network (Barry - Cardiff-Pontypridd - Merthyr & Rhondda) will be announced by end of July.

EU funding is in place for Paddington-Cardiff with WG throwing in extra funding to Swansea. There is a big argument going on between DfT & WG about who is actually responsible for this - DfT saying that transport is devloved and WG should be paying - WG saying that rail infrastructure is not devolved and DfT shoudl be paying.

WG wants all Valley lines electrified at the saem time, but cash not available from DfT.

One outcome of this is that rail infrastructure is now likley to be devolved.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Bottlenecks is an interesting one. I'm sure the last few times I've gone to Brum it's only taken about 1hr45 to get into the city and then we've spent 15 minutes either stationary or just strolling in to New Street. Producing faster trains is difficult on our narrow tracks (so engineers tell me) but there are of course other ways to speed things up.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Tallsmurf
According to latest rumours, electrification of GWR from Paddington to Swansea and the core Valleys network (Barry - Cardiff-Pontypridd - Merthyr & Rhondda) will be announced by end of July.

EU funding is in place for Paddington-Cardiff with WG throwing in extra funding to Swansea. There is a big argument going on between DfT & WG about who is actually responsible for this - DfT saying that transport is devloved and WG should be paying - WG saying that rail infrastructure is not devolved and DfT shoudl be paying.

WG wants all Valley lines electrified at the saem time, but cash not available from DfT.

One outcome of this is that rail infrastructure is now likley to be devolved.


I've read that the DfT is holding back on funding the main line to Swansea and the Vale of Glamorgan and Ebbw Vale lines, it'll still be good news with the core lines electrified anyway but they may as well go for every line. Where is the money coming from the to develop the Metro concept after electrification?

Re: Electrification of the railways

I dont see the Ebbw, Maesteg & VoG lines as being essential for electrification, and would be satisfied if we can get the core valley network electrified.

But there is no justification for not completing the GWR to Swansea. It would be qute a small marginal cost, which would probably be more than offset by reducing the umber of dual-mode trains required. I hope that WG are standing firn on this.

Re: Electrification of the railways

If the SWML is electrified to Swansea, then VoG would be essential as a diversionary route.

If would probably include diversionary routes from Swindon to Gloucester and on towards Caldicot too (when the Severn Tunnel is shut). Electrifying the Maesteg branch would provide (near enough) an electrified route between Cheltenham and Maesteg and probably bring a future Cardiff-Birmingham electrified route much closer.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Looks pretty likely electrification to Swansea will take place, with the bidders for the new Greater Western franchise putting forward their bids taking this as given.

Valleys lines less certain.

Welsh Govt is right on the funding situation though. Don't know DfT thinks it can get away with saying otherwise?!

Re: Electrification of the railways

Agreed Random Comment, unless they have something else up their sleeve. Could we, finally, see the devolution of rail infrastructure to Wales? If so, I presume, that the money raised from the electrifications, Swansea's rate is apparently something like a £2.50 return on every £1 spent

Re: Electrification of the railways

Owen
If would probably include diversionary routes from Swindon to Gloucester and on towards Caldicot too (when the Severn Tunnel is shut)


The Swindon - Kemble line is being redoubled as part of the diversionary route

Chancellor George Osborne has given the go-ahead to the long-awaited redoubling of the Great Western railway line between Kemble and Swindon... He added that it would complement the electrification of the Great Western Line between London and Wales.


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-gloucestershire-12832259

Presumably electrification to Swansea would mean the end of the daily direct service from Carmarthen to Paddington.

I think the signs are pretty good for electrication of the valley lines - excluding Ebbw Vale & Maesteg.

I'm wondering if the electrification of the valley services will end at the present termini or extend on to moth-balled freight routes like Hirwaun, the Nelson branch, Beddau etc.

The Beddau line in particular could be very useful. I seem to remember that it's a capacity problem on the main line west of Cardiff that's the stumbling block.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Beddau does form a parrt of the metro plan. So maybe it would be reopened

Re: Electrification of the railways

There are two potential routes to Beddau - one is via Pontyclun and mainline which does not have much spare capacity.

The other is via Creigiau and Fairwater - would need new track but the trackbed is largely intact. This would avoid capacity limitations on the main line which would allow a station to be opened at St Fagans.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Tallsmurf
There are two potential routes to Beddau - one is via Pontyclun and mainline which does not have much spare capacity.

The other is via Creigiau and Fairwater - would need new track but the trackbed is largely intact. This would avoid capacity limitations on the main line which would allow a "Knowledge-Based Education - We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student's fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority. to be opened at St Fagans.


Would that be st fagans village or the museum?

Would be nice if you could change at an old fashioned station onto a steam train that did a circuit of the park. That's just dreaming though.

Re: Electrification of the railways

colour wolf
Tallsmurf
There are two potential routes to Beddau - one is via Pontyclun and mainline which does not have much spare capacity.

The other is via Creigiau and Fairwater - would need new track but the trackbed is largely intact. This would avoid capacity limitations on the main line which would allow a "Knowledge-Based Education - We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student's fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority. to be opened at St Fagans.


Would that be st fagans village or the museum?

Would be nice if you could change at an old fashioned station onto a steam train that did a circuit of the park. That's just dreaming though.


What on earth did you do with my quote...???

Re: Electrification of the railways

station = Knowledge-Based Education - We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student's fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority.


catch up at the back

Re: Electrification of the railways

I thought it was Gorsaf in Welsh.....

Re: Electrification of the railways

Jantra
station = Knowledge-Based Education - We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student's fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority.


catch up at the back



Oh good god.

Well let that be a warning to everyone not to try to be clever and use cut and.paste on a tiny Android phone.

The offending article was taken from the republican party manifesto in Texas fwiw, which I had previously posted into a different forum!

Re: Electrification of the railways

colour wolf
Jantra
station = Knowledge-Based Education - We oppose the teaching of Higher Order Thinking Skills (HOTS) (values clarification), critical thinking skills and similar programs that are simply a relabeling of Outcome-Based Education (OBE) (mastery learning) which focus on behavior modification and have the purpose of challenging the student's fixed beliefs and undermining parental authority.


catch up at the back



Oh good god.

Well let that be a warning to everyone not to try to be clever and use cut and.paste on a tiny Android phone.

The offending article was taken from the republican party manifesto in Texas fwiw, which I had previously posted into a different forum!


I wish I could say that this was the first time is done this as well, but I've previously managed to post my wifes online banking details into a discussion about football.
Fortunately I managed to get it removed pretty sharpish.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Mrs Jantra was once giving me a lecture via email and I had responded in 'straightforward' terms. The thread was cut and paste into a football forum thread instead of the comment I wanted to make.

I only went back to the thread when it was too late to delete or edit.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Things are looking good will it make people change their mind about the Tories?

Re: Electrification of the railways

Huw
Things are looking good will it make people change their mind about the Tories?


Not really. although I'm prepared to applaud spending on infrastructure where it is needed whoever makes the call.

Re: Electrification of the railways

Huw
Things are looking good will it make people change their mind about the Tories?


As always it depends on how it's framed.

The Welsh Government is working hard to make sure that anything short of electrification of absolutely everything (including the Llynfi and Ebbw lines) can be presented as the proverbial 'slap in the face for Wales'. Presumably they hope people will forget that Labour did bog all when they ran the UK Government.

Re: Electrification of the railways

The Welsh government will take all the credit at the next election even though it was a cross party effort.

Re: Electrification of the railways

If this gets delivered the Tories can hold their heads high in south Wales again.
Labour did zip for our infrastructure

Re: Electrification of the railways

It is a cross party effort politically. More to the point the detailed business cases were developed by the WG who used an experienced team including ARUP and others as required. The business cases are very detailed and comply with the treasury guidelines using the “five case model".
Not sure we would have made as much progress had the DfT maintained responsibility for preparing the business cases. Decision on scope due sometime in next 2-3 weeks and will be made, I suspect, by small group of Snr DfT and Treasury officials with Justine Greening and George Osborne.

Re: Electrification of the railways

M
It is a cross party effort politically. More to the point the detailed business cases were developed by the WG who used an experienced team including ARUP and others as required. The business cases are very detailed and comply with the treasury guidelines using the “five case model".
Not sure we would have made as much progress had the DfT maintained responsibility for preparing the business cases. Decision on scope due sometime in next 2-3 weeks and will be made, I suspect, by small group of Snr DfT and Treasury officials with Justine Greening and George Osborne.


But maybe the WG were prompted by that report by the Cardiff Busines Partnership?

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