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Economic Development

Rail priorities of £8bn for South Wales and the West of England set out

The cross-border Western Gateway Partnership said £8bn of investment is required up to 2050 to address years of under investment

The Great Western Partnership has called on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government to invest to allow quicker and more frequent rail services between South Wales and Temple Meads in Bristol.(Image: PAUL GILLIS / Reach PLC)

The Great Western Partnership, an alliance of public, private and third sector stakeholders across South Wales and the west of England, has reaffirmed its cross-border rail investment priorities in the wake of Rishi Sunak’s decision to pull the plug on the Birmingham to Manchester leg of high speed two.

Instead the Prime Minister said that £36bn of savings from the decision will be invested in transport projects, mainly in the north of England and Midlands.

He has though pledged £1bn to electrify the North Wales mainline, an announcement with no prior consultation with Network Rail and the Welsh Government. While rail is not devolved º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government in 2021 set up with the Welsh Government, Network Rail and Transport for Wales, a new Wales Rail Board to set out rail investment priorities for Wales.


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While it identified electrification of the North Wales route as a priority, it is not the highest ranking and behind projects such as investment in up to six new stations, as recommended in the Lord Burns review, along the South Wales mainline. There is currently no funding breakdown for the cost of electrification of the North Wales line and whether £1bn will be enough to also cover signal upgrading, and increased capacity at Chester station, to allow higher speeds and more frequency of service, including local trains, on an electrified line.

As well as backing the building of new stations along the South Wales mainline as set out by Lord Burns, the Great Western Partnership in its 2050 rail vision document is calling for investment on the South Wales mainline and across into England, to allow up to four trains per hour - currently around one every 40 minutes - between Cardiff and Bristol Temple Meads stations. This it said would reduce journey times from the current 50 minutes to 30 minutes.

Journey times between Swansea and Bristol could be reduced from 90 minutes to an hour with three hourly services. The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s Connectivity Review, chaired by Sir Peter Hendy, described the current rail links as the worst between two major º£½ÇÊÓÆµ conurbations and Cardiff as the “least well connected major º£½ÇÊÓÆµ city.”

The partnership said the cost of improvements to allow more frequency and faster journey times could cost between £1bn to £2bn. In the longer-term its full range of proposals up to 2050 have an indicative cost of between £7bn to £8bn - a fraction of transport funding commitments for the north of England.