º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinion

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government has to put Wales on the right track for fair rail investment

Business Editor Sion Barry makes the case for greater º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government rail investment in Wales

Secretary of State for Transport Heidi Alexander)(Image: 2025 Getty Images)

All eyes will be on Chancellor Rachel Reeves next week when she delivers the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government’s departmental spending allocations for the next three years in the comprehensive spending review.

Her fiscal headroom is tight, but for Wales it will require Secretary of State for Transport Heidi Alexander to commit funding to start addressing decades of under-investment in Wales’ rail network by successive Westminster governments.

Her settlement from the Treasury will mean she cannot please everyone, but having rightly recognised the pressing case to fund much-needed rail enhancement projects in Wales — as highlighted in a welcome joint letter with Welsh Secretary Jo Stevens back in January — she must now deliver, even if it means cutting back elsewhere within her department.

The advisory Wales Rail Board, which includes various stakeholders such as the Department for Transport (DfT), the Wales Office, Transport for Wales, and the Welsh Government, has already drawn up a detailed list of priority rail enhancement projects for Wales.

These come with a price tag of several billion pounds, including the five Burns stations between Cardiff and Magor, improvements to the North Wales Main Line and connectivity with the north west of England, and the required investment — such as a Coryton loop and a Cardiff west junction — to allow for four trains per hour on the most densely populated part of the South Wales Metro: the Coryton and City Lines running through Cardiff.

Once the DfT commits to major projects, like the £16bn rail and bus investment in the Midlands and North of England announced earlier this week, as they take more than three years to complete they will have to be funded for the long-term.

I would expect the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ Government to announce on Wednesday that it will, as a starting point, deliver the five Burns stations: Cardiff East (off Newport Road), Newport West, Maindy, Llanwern, and Magor on the South Wales Main Line. In a phased investment programme, they will take around five years to complete.

The stations were recommended by the Burns Commission, chaired by Lord Burns and commissioned by the Welsh Government to explore ways to boost public transport investment in south-east Wales. This followed former First Minister Mark Drakeford’s 2017 decision not to proceed with a Labour Senedd manifesto pledge to deliver a £1bn M4 relief road south of Newport.