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Global Centre of Rail Excellence boosted with £15m rail innovation project

The project at the planned facility follows a successful bid by a consortium led by the University of Birmingham to the Research Partnership Investment Fund

The site of the Global Centre of Rail Excellence.


Plans for the world’s first integrated train and rail infrastructure testing facility in South Wales has been boosted with £15m in research council funding for a related railway research and innovation centre.

The Welsh Government’s Global Centre of Rail Excellence (GCRE) project, on the site of the former Nant Helen opencast mine and Onllwyn washery in the Dulais Valley, plans to create two electrified rail track testing loops - one extending to 6.9 kilometres able to test high-speed rolling stock at a maximum speed of 177km per hour and an inner four kilometre loop allowing speeds of 65km per hour. It will also be able to test new developments, such as hydrogen powered rolling stock, and infrastructure like signalling.

The £15m funding the Research Partnership Investment Fund has been earmarked for a new centre of excellence for railway testing, validation and customer experience at the GCRE. It follows a successful bid from a consortium led by the University of Birmingham, working alongside Cardiff and Swansea universities.

However, the project - which will aim to leverage millions of pounds further in private sector funding as well as backing from the University of Birmingham - will only materialise if the GCRE, for which enabling work in under way at a site covering 475-hectares, raises £330m. Professional advisory firm EY has been appointed to oversee the fundraising, a combination of debt and equity, on behalf of Welsh Government-owned company Global Centre of Rail Excellence Ltd.

The test track elements have an indicative price tag of £250m. The £400m overall cost of GCRE - for which the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government has already committed to providing £20m alongside £50m from the Welsh Government- also includes a hotel, a high-tech business park, rolling stock storage maintenance and sidings, a dual-platform test facility, as well as a control centre and space for related R&D, education and training purposes. The site could also have its own renewable energy sources.

Equity investors will take an ownership stake in the overall GCRE project alongside the Welsh Government. The project has also secured a funding commitment of nearly £8m from the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government funded Innovate º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

If fundraising comes in under target the test tracks could be scaled down, without compromising the university project. However, if it fails to raise enough money for even a scaled down project, it couldn’t happen in isolation. How much equity the Welsh Government maintains post fundraising will be subject to negotiation with investors, who will need to have confidence in the robustness of the business plan with a strong market appetite across the rail industry to use the facility. Transport for Wales, which is owned by the Welsh Government and train maker Hitachi has already committed to using it when it becomes operational in 2025.

The Research Partnership Investment Fund backed project is being driven by the Birmingham Centre for Railway Research and Education (BCRRE) at the University of Birmingham. The centre is Europe’s largest specialist railway research, education, and innovation centre.