The National Audit Office (NAO) has today published a financial
overview of the rail system in England, setting out how much it
costs, how it is paid for and some of the challenges ahead.
Building on information published by the Office of Rail and Road,
Network Rail and the audited accounts1, the overview
examines income and expenditure from the five financial years
ending in March 2020. For example, it shows a breakdown of the
£17.4 billion total expenditure of the rail system in England in
2019-20. This included:
- £9.5 billion spent on operating rail passenger services;
- £7.1 billion spent on operating rail network infrastructure;
and
- £0.9 billion spent on operating freight services and High
Speed 1 (HS1).2
In 2019-20, total rail sector income was £17.1 billion, of which
£5.1 billion was government funding. The remaining £12.0 billion
was earned income, the majority (80%) of which was earned through
passenger fares. These proportions changed with the onset of the
COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020.
The arrangements for delivering rail services in England are
complex, and distributed across the public and private sector.
This makes it difficult for Parliament and taxpayers to
understand the overall financial position, to which the taxpayer
is ultimately exposed, and the impact of government's
choices3.
This financial overview aims to enhance clarity at a moment of
significant industry change. The anticipated recommendations of
the Williams Rail Review4 are expected to address
long-standing issues within the system5 and will be
published in a context of heightened uncertainty about the future
demand for rail6. There are a number of significant
challenges for government to address, including managing costs to
taxpayers and rail's contribution to the government's net zero
target for carbon emissions.
Notes for Editors
- The Overview builds on existing data published by key rail
industry organisations, including the cross-industry data
available from the Office of Rail and Road (ORR), and Network
Rail.
- The figures for the breakdown of the £17.4 billion total
expenditure of the rail system in England in 2019-20 have been
rounded.
- The National Audit Office (NAO) report Department for Transport
Departmental Overview 2019-20 set out the financial
challenges faced by the privatised passenger rail franchising
system in 2020. The government's net income from train
operators had fallen, and in 2019-20 the position became one of
net government subsidy.
- The Williams Rail Review
is an independent review established by the government in
September 2018 to look at the structure of the whole rail
industry and the way passenger rail services are delivered. The
review was set up following the May 2018 timetable disruption
and the collapse of the Virgin Trains East Coast franchise.
- The House of Commons Committee of Public Accounts highlighted
its concerns about the fragmented nature of responsibilities in
rail, cost overruns, project delays and disruption in its
February 2019 report Rail management and
timetabling.
- The Department for Transport introduced emergency agreements
to support train operators as income from passengers fell
dramatically as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. It is
currently absorbing all revenues, costs and risks of the rail
franchising system while paying operators a fixed management fee
for operating services.