- Prime Minister and Transport Secretary
will unveil plans to
overhaul and modernise rail connections, with passengers seeing
benefits ten years sooner than under previous plans
- At £96bn, the biggest ever public investment in the rail
network will transform journeys to and between the East and West
Midlands, Yorkshire and the North West
- Ambitious plan focuses on local services as well as
high-speed links, improving connections for everyone, not just
those travelling between biggest cities
Faster train journeys will be delivered up to ten years sooner
under the Government’s new Integrated Rail Plan (IRP), with
biggest ever £96bn investment in the rail network unveiled today
(Thursday 18 November).
From London and across the Pennines, the IRP delivers journey
times which are the same as, similar to or faster than the
original HS2 and Leeds-Manchester proposals, while doubling or
trebling capacity and ensuring passengers and consumers benefit
from tangible changes more quickly.
The new plan – full details of which will be published on
Thursday - will not only strengthen connections between major
cities in the North and Midlands, but improve shorter-distance
routes which people depend on every day, with an emphasis on
increasing capacity and more reliable services.
With £360m allocated for London-style contactless ticketing
across commuter rail networks, the IRP is designed to improve not
just rail links but to deliver price-capped integrated ticketing
with local buses and trams – simplifying and streamlining
thousands of daily journeys across the Midlands and the North.
Prime Minister said:
“If we are to see levelling up in action now, we must rapidly
transform the services that matter to people most.
“That’s why the Integrated Rail Plan will be the biggest
transport investment programme in a century, delivering
meaningful transport connections for more passengers across the
country, more quickly – with both high-speed journeys and better
local services, it will ensure no town or city is left behind.”
Transport Secretary said:
“Throughout the pandemic, we stood by our railway and invested
billions to keep the country moving, and we are about to unleash
a £96 billion programme of investment that will transform a
Victorian network into one befitting a modern country.
“The Integrated Rail Plan is designed to deliver for everyone,
much sooner than under previous plans for rail schemes drawn up a
decade ago, which no longer fit the way we travel today.
“Our plan will deliver a network that is fit for passengers today
and for future generations – a network that works for every
community and every passenger, right across the UK.”
The IRP was initiated after the Oakervee Review recommended an
assessment of major transport schemes, like HS2 and Northern
Powerhouse Rail, to produce a plan that would truly deliver for
the North and the Midlands. This included looking at how to
increase capacity and have more frequent services in a way that
presented value for money for the taxpayer.
The IRP was drawn up after it became clear that the full HS2 and
Northern Powerhouse Rail schemes as originally proposed would not
enter service until the early to mid-2040s. It is framed by the
Government’s commitment to deliver on its levelling up agenda by
transforming connectivity for people right across the country and
unlocking productivity in the North and the Midlands.