What people don’t know about HS2
As Arnab Dutt, managing director of British manufacturer Texane and a public member of Network Rail, argues against
the organisation’s
a public member of Network Rail, a group of around 40 people who oversee secondary governance
scrutinising the effectiveness of the Board, it’s fair to say that I’m more up to speed on the rail investment programme than the average traveller. But if you ask anyone on a train today what they think of the HS2 project, you should expect to hear some very ill-informed opinions.
A recent report from the Institute of Directors concluded that HS2 is not the infrastructure Britain needs. This ‘Big Picture’ report took opinion from a minute proportion of members, just 1,200 Directors from a possible 34,500, claiming the costs exceeded the benefits. A larger, more informed sample would have been more reliable.
How is it that people have been whipped into opposition for investment in what should be a flagship rail project while on the other hand, they complain vociferously that the existing network is falling into rack and ruin?
The notion that Britain’s whole rail network is starved of investment is hard-wired into the nation’s psyche, but like many of the arguments against HS2, actually it is far from the truth. Network Rail is actually investing £38bn in infrastructure over a shorter period than the government is planning to spend on the HS2 project – but too few people know this.
I attended a conference this month and was shocked how many informed and intelligent people believed that investing in HS2 and Network Rail infrastructure were not mutually compatible. They erroneously believed that the funding for HS2 would take place instead of upgrading the national rail network.
What the public has failed to understand is that HS2 is a huge project that will create work for hundreds of British companies, employment for thousands, stimulating innovation, design, manufacturing,
engineering apprenticeships
and an upsurge in the service industries 128 | rail technology magazine Feb/Mar 14
that support the supply chain.
The anti-HS2 lobby say that the regions will suffer, everyone will go to London. Rail lines go both ways, with property prices increasing and the cost of setting up businesses in London and the southeast rising exponentially, HS2 will make having an office in Manchester or Birmingham a better option. It is more than cutting journey times. It’s about creating the rail capacity that the country needs as our economy grows. It is about thinking 50 years ahead.
“Network Rail is actually investing £38bn in infrastructure over a shorter period than the government is planning to spend on the HS2 project – but too few people know this.”
Canary Wharf attracted similar cynicism at its inception. It was a huge white elephant at the time, which has now helped London become the financial services capital of the world. It’s the same with the Docklands Light Railway and the Jubilee Line Extension. The M25 was passionately lobbied against and in the end where would we be without it – today we know it should have been wider.
Thameslink and Crossrail are fundamental major rail infrastructure projects that are only just helping us cope in the southeast with growing passenger numbers. The anti-HS2 lobby seem to have been deafeningly silent about them.
The vast majority of MPs have voted for HS2 and it is going to happen. There needs to be a concerted effort to get the facts out to the public. The KPMG report on HS2 stated it will
increase regional connectivity. The UK must have joined-up transport infrastructure that efficiently interconnects all modes, including road and air.
The anti-HS2 propaganda was not challenged early enough. Today the government and the UK rail industry are forcefully making a very compelling case for HS2 but more needs to be done. All of us need to be out there advocating and dispelling the myths about HS2.
The simple fact is, if we don’t invest in HS2, our network grinds to a halt in 2030. There will simply not be enough capacity for the huge growth in passengers and rail freight. Passenger growth numbers are double what were predicted 10 years ago.
Presently we are operating a Victorian legacy railway network with 21st-century demands placed upon it. Without thinking 50 years ahead and taking action, our transport infrastructure becomes a slow motion national train disaster.
We want to encourage more freight to disappear off our congested roads and switch to the greener alternative of rail. We need to believe in progress and a legacy that future generations can be proud of. We need to understand and plan for huge demographic change and population increase.
The anti-HS2 campaign worries falsely about Manchester or Birmingham competing with London. They should be more concerned about Britain competing with Germany and China. That is what HS2 is really about and that is the message that we need the public to understand.
Arnab Dutt
TELL US WHAT YOU THINK
opinion@railtechnologymagazine.com
the all-too-common belief that investing in both HS2 and the existing infrastructure are not mutually compatible.
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