The following Answer to an Urgent Question was given in the House
of Commons on Monday 18 September. “Spades are already in the
ground for HS2 and we remain focused on its delivery. The Minister
for Rail and HS2, the Minister of State, Department for Transport,
my honourable friend the Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw
Merriman), is in the Czech Republic today to sign a memorandum of
understanding with the Czech Government, and tomorrow he will be in
Poland to attend...Request free trial
The following Answer to an Urgent Question was given in the House
of Commons on Monday 18 September.
“Spades are already in the ground for HS2 and we remain focused
on its delivery. The Minister for Rail and HS2, the Minister of
State, Department for Transport, my honourable friend the Member
for Bexhill and Battle (), is in the Czech Republic today to sign a
memorandum of understanding with the Czech Government, and
tomorrow he will be in Poland to attend TRAKO, supporting UK rail
supply chain companies at a major European rail trade fair. For
that reason, I am responding on behalf of the Government.
Construction continues in earnest, with about 350 active
construction sites, and we are getting on with delivery, with
high-speed rail services between London and Birmingham Curzon
Street due to commence in 2033, with the re-scoped stages
following. This will specifically drive the regeneration of 1,600
acres, delivering 40,000 homes and supporting 65,000 jobs in
outer London. The benefits of HS2 for Birmingham are already
being realised; the area around Curzon Street station is already
becoming a focal point for transformation, development and
economic growth. The Government provide regular six-monthly
reports on HS2 to the House, and we will continue to keep the
House updated on the project.”
6.22pm
(Lab)
My Lords, is it not an unmitigated failure of Conservative rail
policy that, yesterday, in the other place, its own chair of the
Transport Committee commented on the false economy of what is
supposed to be the fast rail network that delivers against
levelling-up goals, but which will reach neither the great cities
of the north or central London? He said that HS2
“would not realise the full benefits of the line and communities
will have been enormously impacted for no great
benefit”.—[Official Report, Commons, 18/9/23; col. 1109.]
Back in March, when reports of a delay emerged, I told the House
that this chronic indecision was benefitting no one. Now, through
a photograph published in the Independent, we learn that the
route could be scaled back even further. Given that, in January
this year, the Chancellor said that he could not see any
conceivable circumstance in which HS2 would not end at London
Euston, can the Minister confirm that the line will not terminate
at Old Oak Common and when, if ever, it will reach
Manchester?
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Transport () (Con)
There has been an awful lot of media speculation and
hypotheticals. As noble Lords will know, the Department for
Transport, and indeed every single government department, will
periodically look at major infrastructure projects, which in this
case includes HS2. We are committed to keeping the House updated,
as we have done for many years. There will be a regular
six-monthly report on HS2 to keep the House updated in due
course.
(LD)
My Lords, this is death by a thousand cuts for HS2, if I can be
excused the pun—cuts to the route and cuts to the funding. Each
time the Government shave another slice off the route, it further
undermines the purpose of the whole project, and each time this
happens it marginally reduces the total cost but increases the
cost per mile and fatally undermines the purpose of the scheme.
Earlier, the Minister conspicuously failed to confirm that Great
British Rail is still in the Government’s plans. If that was a
mistake, she may like to take this opportunity to put this right.
Is she not embarrassed to be here, week after week, trying to
defend this Government of dither and delay? Can she tell us
whether the Government have done any calculation as to the
adverse economic and reputational impact of their failure to
deliver on HS2 on the ability of cities in the north of England
to attract investment?
(Con)
Of course, a vast amount of analysis on HS2, and indeed on all
infrastructure projects, goes on all the time. There are many
elements in attracting investment to northern cities, or indeed
to cities anywhere. Schemes such as the city region sustainable
transport settlements put billions of pounds into Manchester,
which the mayor can spend on local transport schemes. There is
the opportunity for local partnerships to improve local train
services as well. That is a key part of GBR. I can reassure the
noble Baroness that the GBR transition team still exists and is
doing the work; GBR is making very good progress indeed.
Obviously, I cannot second guess what will be in the King’s
Speech, but there is a lot of work going on in GBR and many
reforms are being put in place. I hope that the noble Baroness is
content with that.
(Con)
My Lords, the Minister knows very well my views on this
worthless, scandalous, vanity project—which I think most of the
country now share. In January 2017, I put to this House the
opportunity to stop it, but we decided to go ahead. Reliable
sources now say that it will cost £150 billion. Is it not the
case that, even if we have spent £5 billion, £10 billion or £20
billion so far, sensible accountants always say you do not pour
good money after bad? Surely now is the time to put right what we
have got wrong, save the money and spend it on areas of the
country which badly need their railway networks improved.
(Con)
I am aware of my noble friend’s position on HS2. It demonstrates
that there is a wide range of views. As I said earlier, the
Government will update the House as part of their regular
six-monthly reports on HS2.
(Lab)
My Lords, about six to nine months ago, the Government said that
they would pause all work at Euston. Has that happened? My
impression is, as reports I get suggest, that there is a great
deal of work going on there. Can the Minister tell us how much
work has gone on even after it was paused?
(Con)
I am not able to give an update on the physical work that is
going on. My understanding is that the position at Euston has not
changed. Again, that will be in the regular six-monthly
update.
(Con)
My Lords, I declare my interest as chairman of Transport for the
North. Yesterday, in the Commons, the Minister said:
“The benefits of HS2 for Birmingham are already being
realised”.—[Official Report, Commons, 18/9/23; col. 1107.]
He is correct. The simple fact is that this is a huge project—a
project not about speed but about capacity. If we are to see more
people and more freight using our railways, capacity is
desperately needed. This project was started 14 years so. We
should see it finished and serving the nation.
(Con)
I am grateful to my noble friend for pointing out the enormous
benefits that Birmingham is currently seeing. All across the
route of phase 1, there are shovels in the ground, with 350
active construction sites and 29,500 workers. The focus is on
delivering high-speed rail services between London and
Birmingham.
(Lab)
My Lords, will the Minister go further in acknowledging the
common-sense view expressed by the noble Lord, ? Will she also reflect on
the fact that, so far, almost a third of the around 140-mile line
between London and Birmingham is either through tunnels or on
viaducts? We are spending a vast amount of money trying to please
people who oppose the project and who have opposed it right from
the start. Is it not about time we took a leaf out of the book of
the French railways? At the time they built their high-speed line
across France, they said: “When we are draining the swamp, we do
not consult the frogs”?
(Con)
The noble Lord makes a very interesting point. It is right—and
this is not only for High Speed 2 but for many major infra-
structure projects—that local interests can sometimes cause the
cost of projects to increase. I need only mention, for example,
Chesham and Amersham, where I think there is a Liberal Democrat
Member—and they are deeply behind HS2, apart from any candidate
who wins a by-election. Sometimes, to please certain groups of
people, additional expense must be had, and sometimes that is
absolutely valid. That is the difficulty with building major
infrastructure. But the planning permission that goes into it and
the DCO process—or in this case the hybrid Bills—have to reach
the right balance, and sometimes one has to question whether it
is in the right place.
(Con)
My Lords, does my noble friend the Minister recognise the risks
that we are going to run? First, the country will be seen as a
laughingstock if we can no longer build a railway. Secondly, the
expectations of people in the north and the east Midlands will
feel betrayed.
It is very difficult to persuade visitors to this country that
Old Oak Common is any part of central London. I hope that we will
bear in mind also, despite all that has been said in the argument
that has raged over the years, that speed is at the very heart of
the human psyche. People want to do things faster than has been
done before—and that still exists today.
(Con)
We are already building a high-speed railway. Phase 1 for HS2 is
well under way. We expect services to commence by 2033. Before
the noble Lord completely dismisses Old Oak Common, if any of us
is alive in 20 or 30 years’ time —I look at myself in this
regard—that whole area will look completely different. It is
1,600 acres, and there will be 40,000 homes and 65,000 jobs. That
is something that I think we should be proud of.
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