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PRIVACY
Opinion

Tough financial outlook for rail sector and Transport for Wales

While TfW has reached agreement with rail unions services are still impacted

RMT Union members have formed a picket line at Cardiff Central station(Image: WalesOnline/Rob Browne)

It is likely that 2023 will be another challenging year, in economic and financial terms, for transport users, transport companies, Welsh Government and Transport for Wales (TfW).

The rail dispute is an ironic challenge for rail users in Wales. Welsh Government ministers approved a pay increase of 6.6% to 9.5% (depending on grades) and some changes in employment conditions for TfW Rail employees. However, TfW Rail services can only operate on days when RMT union members at Network Rail take no action as the latter maintain the track and operate the signals. Scotrail (also government owned) has agreed a 7% - 9% pay increase.

The revenue and costs risks of England’s train operating contractors(in Wales, Avanti, Cross Country and GWR) and state-owned Network Rail are taken by the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Department for Transport and HM Treasury. Consequently they have to agree any major cost increases such as higher wages for railway staff.

The TfW board therefore faces a financial challenge not of its making. Its report for mid-July to mid-August 2022 showed a bottom-line reduction of £950,000 which if extrapolated to mid-January 2023 could be £6m. Revenue has been lost during 2022 while staff have been paid. This financial shortfall challenge for TfW is likely to continue in 2023 unless the negotiating position between the trade unions and England’s government improves.

More welcoming for Wales’ rail passengers are the brand-new diesel and electric trains (with their usual operational challenges)arriving during 2 2024 They provide more passenger capacity, shorter journey times and higher frequencies to encourage a shift from the motor car to rail transport. Bimodal or trimodal electric powered trains on the Core Valley Lines network north of Cardiff parallel new trains on Dublin city and Scotland’s urban rail networks.

They, as in Wales, replace 40-year-old diesel stock. This project also has the capital cost of CVL electrification as a further challenge – to keep within the £800m budget which unlike Scotland is entirely at the Welsh Government’s risk as there is no rail capital Barnet consequential in Wales.

Diesel-only trains on the remainder of the network will face the additional challenge of achieving the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government zero greenhouse gases target by 2050. Refitting diesel trains is a difficult engineering and high-cost process which TfW will face during the forty-year design life of these trains.

Again positively, electric buses are being successfully operated in Newport and Cardiff providing for reduced urban pollution and are to be introduced shortly on the TrawsCymru service between Carmarthen and Aberystwyth.