No UK commitment on HS2 rail in Scotland

UK GOVERNMENT ministers today refused to make any commitment to extending the proposed HS2 high speed rail line to Scotland as they launched a study with the Scottish Government into how to cut journeys from London to three hours.
The current HS2 plans would make Scotland-London journeys just 20 minutes faster in 20 years time than the quickest current trains. Picture: ContributedThe current HS2 plans would make Scotland-London journeys just 20 minutes faster in 20 years time than the quickest current trains. Picture: Contributed
The current HS2 plans would make Scotland-London journeys just 20 minutes faster in 20 years time than the quickest current trains. Picture: Contributed

Rail minister Baroness Kramer and fellow Liberal Democrat Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael said the study would look at options to upgrading existing lines as well as extending HS2 across the Border.

However, Scottish transport minister Keith Brown criticised them for failing to commit to extending the line to Scotland, and their “slow progress” over the issue.

Report due in July

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A draft report is due to be completed by next July, which will examine whether HS2 should be extended north from Manchester and/or Leeds, or whether the east and/or west coast main lines should be upgraded, or a combination of both.

HS2 - which would follow HS1, the former Channel Tunnel rail Link - is due to be completed from London to the Birmingham area in 2026 and Manchester and Leeds in 2033.

High-speed trains would continue to Scotland using existing lines, taking four hours in 2026 and 3 hours 38 minutes in 2033.

The fastest current Edinburgh-London train takes 4 hours, with others averaging four-and-a-half hours.

The quickest London-Glasgow train is 4 hours eight 8 minutes, with others averaging 4 hours 30-40 minutes.

No comment on costs

Baroness Kramer declined to say how much extending the line north was likely to cost, or who would pay for it.

She said: “Let’s take a look at what the study says first.

“We have learned the dangers of jumping the gun before the work has been done.”

Mr Carmichael said: “You will only get high-speed rail to Scotland once you have delivered the Y-shape to Manchester and Leeds.

“Getting it to Scotland is the next piece of the jigsaw.”

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But Mr Brown said Mr Carmichael should “put Scotland at top of his ‘to-do’ list” and commit to bringing the line across the Border now.

Scotland ‘would contribute’

He said the Scottish Government would contribute to the cost of a high-speed line, but how much of the route it would pay for had yet to be decided.

Mr Brown said former UK Transport Secretary Justine Greening had agreed to the study at the beginning of last year.

He said: “It is disappointing it has taken this long.”

He also reaffirmed the Scottish Government’s commitment to building a Y-shape high-speed line between Edinburgh and Glasgow by 2024 that could link up with HS2 somewhere like Carstairs, despite the cost still being unknown.

A Scottish Government-commissioned study in 2007 put the cost at £7 billion.

The minister said a business case for the project was due to be completed in the Spring.