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Economic Development

Cancelling HS2 to Euston would be 'height of folly', rail group says amid fears for Birmingham-Manchester leg

Chancellor insist scheme will happen; one analyst says 'If you’re flying into Heathrow, you don’t want to go to Southend'

Photo dated August 2022 issued by HS2 of an aerial view of the HS2 Euston station construction site in London(Image: PA)

Rail industry experts say cancelling HS2's Euston leg would be the "height of folly" and would cut off cities north of Birmingham from the new high-speed line.

National newspaper reports today suggest HS2's Euston terminus could be delayed or even scrapped because of rising costs. That would mean trains to London terminating instead at Old Oak Common in the suburbs of West London with passengers using the Elizabeth Line to travel further.

It was also suggested that a 2-5 year delay to the project was being considered. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt today insisted the Government was committed to the Euston leg - though acknowledged "we have not got a good record in this country of delivering complex, expensive infrastructure quickly".

In response to the earlier speculation, a spokesperson for the High Speed Rail Group said: "Cancelling Euston would be the height of folly. The construction site is already very well progressed. Works have been underway there for 5 years and already hundreds of millions have been spent.

READ MORE: Key points from Jeremy Hunt's speech from 'mini Canary Wharfs' to inflation

"Old Oak Common station has nowhere near enough platforms to serve as the London terminus. Indeed, if it was, there would only be enough capacity to allow London-Birmingham shuttle services on HS2. In very simple terms, if Old Oak Common is the terminus, you cannot have HS2 services reaching Manchester. If you cut off Euston, you also cut off Manchester and the rest of the north.

"Finally, if the suggestion is to merely delay the opening of Euston, then it is true that you may save some money in the very short term. But by delaying works, allowing more construction inflation to creep in, you will actually add to the overall cost. It would be a total false economy.

"We need to take a long term view and build HS2 in full."