º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Manufacturing

Siemens Mobility boss calls on Government to step up train procurement to back its 'rail village'

Sambit Banerjee stressed the investment that has gone into the firm's Goole facility, while giving evidence to MPs on the Transport Committee

Assembly Manager Dom Rodd with an IM Car, at the opening of the £200 million Siemens' Rail Village in Goole(Image: PA)

The boss of Goole train maker Siemens Mobility has warned his company is not getting the opportunity to tender competitively for rolling stock projects.

Sambit Banerjee, joint chief executive of the firm, told MPs that gaps in procurement of new trains presented challenges for the manufacturer, which last year invested £200m into a new Goole facility. The site is currently building rolling stock for the London Underground to replace an ageing fleet on the Piccadilly Line.

Giving evidence at a hearing of the Transport Committee's investigation into boom and bust within the rail investment pipelines, Mr Banerjee said that without winning one of three tender opportunities currently on the table, the business faced a steep drop.

He said: "We have, at Siemens, invested £340m in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ in the last five years. £240m in Goole, to set up a manufacturing facility and £100m in Chippenham, in our railway infrastructure business, to set up a state-of-the-art, modern research and development and manufacturing unit. At present, we are manufacturing Piccadilly Line trains in Goole, which will finish, as per the current schedule, around May of 2027.

"After that, if we do not win any of these projects that we're bidding for competitively, or the Bakerloo Line extension is not done, then there is of course a steep drop there. In Goole, we have created employment for 700 and in the supply chain, 1,700. It's not only about Siemens, it's also the ecosystem that we're working with.

"It's also about people in Goole, in Doncaster, in Sheffield and in Scunthorpe, because our employees are coming from that catchment area. We are very, very mindful that we effect a lot of people in the bigger catchment area of Goole as well."

A national Rolling Stock Strategy is currently in the works, and the setting up of Great British Railways is set to bring about the nationalisation of most of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's rail infrastructure. Mr Banerjee called on the Government to ramp up procurement.

He said: "We see now an immediate necessity to push ahead through the new rolling stock procurement. And our request, to DfT has always been, let's stick to the timelines. Because, as I said, we're putting in money much before the contract is signed