Government confirms further HS2 delays in bid to cut costs
Construction of the line between Birmingham and Crewe will be delayed by two years
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Your support makes all the difference.Rishi Sunakās government has delayed some sections of the ambitious HS2 railway project in a bid to save money, it has been announced.
Transport secretary Mark Harper said construction of the high-speed rail line between Birmingham and Crewe will be delayed by two years.
Mr Harper also revealed setbacks to key road projects as he blamed the pressures of soaring inflation for the cost-saving measures that threaten to deliver a blow to ālevelling upā plans.
In a written ministerial statement, he said: āThe government is committed to delivering HS2 Phase 2a between Birmingham and Crewe.
āWe have seen significant inflationary pressure and increased project costs, and so we will rephase construction by two years, with an aim to deliver high-speed services to Crewe and the northwest as soon as possible after accounting for the delay in construction.ā
HS2 has been dogged by criticism over its finances, with costs ballooning far beyond the initial estimates set out during David Cameronās Conservative government.
The whole project, aimed at creating a high-speed rail line being built from London to the northwest, was given a budget of Ā£55.7bn in 2015.
But the overall target cost, excluding the eastern leg of Phase 2b from the west Midlands to the east Midlands, has ballooned to between Ā£53bn and Ā£71bn.
Labour said the latest delay to theĀ HS2Ā high-speed rail link meant the north of England was again having to āpay the priceā for Tory government failures.
Shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh MP said: āConservative chaos and chronic indecision is holding back jobs, growth and costing the taxpayer.ā
She added: āThis is the biggest project in Europe and delays pile costs up in the long run ā ministers now need to come clean on precisely how much their indecision will cost taxpayers and the north.ā
Henri Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, said the decision was ādisappointingā but said he was ārelievedā that the most northerly section of the route between Crewe and Manchester will be protected.
Mr Murison said delaying projects ādoesnāt make them cheaper, it only holds back economic benefits and increases the overall scheme costs further in the long-runā, adding: āWeāre paying a huge price for the endless dithering during Boris Johnsonās premiershipā.
The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) also condemned the decision, saying the delay would hit confidence in the rail industry and could ultimately lead to higher overall costs forĀ HS2.
But senior Tory MP Simon Clarke, the former chief secretary to the Treasury under Liz Truss, described delaying the project as a āsensible decisionā.
āHaving observed HS2ās progress as chief secretary, I have serious doubts as to value for money and cost control,ā he said.
Michael Fabricant, also a Tory MP, said he will ask the government whether the delay āmarks the end ofĀ HS2Ā north of Birminghamā and if the ādamageā done in southern Staffordshire ā including to his Lichfield constituency ā will be repaired.
āCovid has encouraged remote working and even now regular rail commutes are down by 40 per cent on pre-Covid levels,ā he said. āThe government are well aware this makes the business case forĀ HS2Ā even less convincing than it was in the first place.ā
But Birmingham City Council leader Ian Ward said the decision was āanother betrayal of the Midlands and the north, making a mockery of the governmentās empty promises to level up the UK economyā.
HS2 Ltd chief executive Mark Thurston recently said the project has suffered a āsignificantā impact from inflation adding to the cost of building materials, labour, fuel and energy. āWeāre looking at where we can use our supply chain to secure a lot of those things that are costing us more through inflation,ā he told the BBC.
Andy Bagnall, chief executive for rail industry lobby group Rail Partners, said recent inflationary pressures had made infrastructure projects āmore challengingā, but insisted HS2 was worth pushing forward.
āIt is critical for Britainās economy and meeting net zero targets that large sections of HS2 are not delayed, which will ultimately increase the overall cost,ā he said.
Mr Harper also set out delays for services running to Euston in central London, as he instead focuses on initial services to Old Oak Common in the capitalās western suburbs.
The high-speed line was due for extension between Birmingham and Crewe between 2030 and 2034 to help boost transport in the north of England.
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