28/05/2009

Start Planning Early For Increased Demand Says Rail Industry

Today the rail industry set out its vision for what the railway should look like and be able to deliver for passengers and freight users in 20 to 30 years time.

In 'Planning ahead', a paper published today, Network Rail, the Association of Train Operating Companies (ATOC) and the Rail Freight Operators' Association (RFOA), look beyond recent improvements in punctuality and the work already agreed to develop the railway over the next five years.

The paper sets out a vision for the long term future that focuses on passenger and freight users' needs, including a railway capable of handling potential demand that could double over the next 30 years and possibly even triple in the longer term.

It points to a railway where:
  • Passengers experience more comfortable journeys with better stations, less overcrowding
  • There is much better integration with other forms of transport, with parkway stations for major cities and towns to relieve road congestion and better rail links to airports
  • 80% of passengers travel on a green, electrified network
  • There is new capacity on the network, including new high speed lines that has all but replaced internal flights
  • Record train punctuality will be further improved and sustained
  • Most replacement bus services during improvement work have been eliminated
  • Freight market share doubles from 11.5% to 20% taking millions of lorry journeys off our roads
  • The railway plays a vital role in reducing carbon emissions
  • Track-side signals and telephones are eradicated as trains are controlled by computer and digital radio technology
  • The taxpayer, passenger and freight users see a network that is highly efficient and affordable
The document also challenges government planning and calls for public transport to be at the core of housing, business and leisure planning in the future so that such new developments, that can add ten of thousands of new houses, are located where there are strong transport links that have spare capacity.

Paul Plummer, Network Rail's Director of Planning and Regulation, said: "With railway assets having a typical life of between 30 to 60 years, a long term-strategic view of what our railways will need to deliver in the decades ahead is essential.

"Today's publication is a start but much more work will be done as the industry works to advise and guide governments in making affordable investment decisions that will benefit the passengers and freight users of the future."

(CD/JM)

Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

13 January 2012
Legal Action Taken Over Cumbrian Rail Crash
It has been revealed that Network rail is to be prosecuted over the Cumbrian rail crash back in 2007, which claimed one life. The rail regulation body, The Office of Rail Regulation (ORR) has said that they have started legal proceedings against Network Rail for a breach of health and safety law.
08 November 2011
High Speed Rail Network Gets Backing
A government committee has announced that a high-speed rail link between London and Birmingham has a "good case". The announcement comes after the Government carried out a public consultation on the proposal and the recommended route for an initial high-speed line from London to the West Midlands.
08 January 2013
Network Rail Plans £37.5bn Investment
Network Rail has committed to the biggest investment in infrastructure since the Victorian era. Network Rail plans to spend £37.5bn on running and expanding Britain’s railway over the five years to 2019.
09 June 2015
Police Appeal For Help Over Ongoing Flasher Incidents
North Yorkshire Police have appealed for information on a number of flasher incidents in the Harrowgate area since 2007. Police do not know if the incidents are the crimes of one man or different offenders, as descriptions vary.
23 June 2014
High-Speed Rail Link Needed To Boost Northern England
Chancellor George Osborne has announced government plans for a high-speed rail link in the north of England to help re-balance the UK economy. Mr Osborne said a new high-speed railway would create "a northern powerhouse" in a project called by the government as the "most important investment in the north for a century".