º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Economic Development

Wales and the west of England needs billions in new rail projects says report

A programme of much needed rail enhancement projects for Wales and the west of England has been outlined by the Western Gateway Partnership

Severn Tunnel Junction railway station(Image: Rob Norman/ WalesOnline)

A case for billions of pounds of investment in rail enhancement projects in Wales and the west of England will be outlined at a conference in Cardiff today.

The cross-border Western Gateway Partnership will unveil its Rail Deal report which calls for, amongst other projects, 30 new train stations in phases one and two of a long-term programme of investment, which it said would give an extra quarter of million people access to the rail network, as well an additional 23 services an hour.

Following on for its rail vision report in 2023, the partnership is also calling for the upgrading of existing major stations such as Cardiff, Bristol Temple Meads and Swindon.

It said rail investment is urgently need to address decades of neglect by successive º£½ÇÊÓÆµ governments on rail enhancement projects on both sides of the border, as well as helping to reduce emissions by providing a viable alternative to car journeys.

If its recommendations, which are not costed, are realised it said it would generate £17bn of economic benefits to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

The Rail Deal’s priority investments include:

  • Delivery of six new stations between Cardiff and Monmouthshire - which includes the proposed Cardiff Parkway scheme - on the South Wales Mainline, which the report says would facilitate 1.5 million additional passenger train journeys a year.
  • Early phases of the Metrowest programme which includes the new Portishead line and North Filton Station (Brabazon Arena).

Phase two calls for upgrades of Cardiff Central (for which funding has already been identified) and Bristol Temple Meads, a direct service to Heathrow Airport, the reopening of the Swansea District Line and electrification to Bristol (Filton Bank and Chippenham ) and Oxford.

It also calls for electrification of the South Wales Mainline to Swansea, as originally planned before being abandoned by the then Tory º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government in 2017 on cost grounds, so resulting in electrification from London only reaching Cardiff.