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'At most one new operator' can move in to East London Eurostar depot

The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) has been assessing capacity at Temple Mills International depot after Eurostar claimed it was "basically full"

A Eurostar train at London St Pancras International(Image: PA)

The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's rail regulator has indicated that there is limited space available at Eurostar's principal east London train depot, with room for "at most" one additional rail operator.

The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) has been evaluating the capacity at Temple Mills International depot following claims by Eurostar that the facility was "basically full," as reported by .

On Thursday, the ORR announced that there is potential for either "at most one new operator, or for Eurostar to grow" urging interested parties to present comprehensive plans to decide the optimal use of the depot's capacity. A definitive ruling on the submissions is expected later in the year.

Eurostar could see its exclusive control over cross-channel routes challenged for the first time since it began operations 30 years ago.

Virgin Group under Sir Richard Branson, Spanish newcomer Evolyn, and Gemini, led by Labour peer Lord Berkeley, have all expressed their ambitions to initiate high-speed rail services to France.

These contenders are awaiting regulatory approval to utilise Eurostar's Temple Mills depot, which stands as the sole º£½ÇÊÓÆµ facility equipped for parking and servicing high-speed, cross-channel trains.

Eurostar depot decision later this year

Martin Jones, deputy director at the ORR, commented: "The growing appetite to provide international rail services is great news for passengers."

He added, "We now need operators to set out more detail on their proposals at pace, and will work quickly and as thoroughly as possible to determine the best use of capacity at Temple Mills."