Last Wednesday, at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester, UK
prime minister Rishi Sunak confirmed the full amputation of high-speed rail link HS2 north of Birmingham. One arm, to Leeds, had
already been lopped off in 2021. Now the other, to the very city in which Sunak
was speaking, was to be sacrificed too. Only one section of the grand infrastructure project that was designed to cut journey times between the North and South will ultimately enter
operation, with construction already underway on HS2 between London and Birmingham.
To understand why Greater Manchester’s business travel community is distraught,
consider a LinkedIn post the following day by Stockport-based travel and
payments professional Paul Raymond en route to the Institute of Travel
Management autumn conference in London – by air.
“There was another train
strike yesterday, which meant today’s early departures were likely to be
delayed and so getting to London for a 10am start was a roll of the dice,”
Raymond wrote. “That said, even if a train was running it was actually cheaper
to fly to London. Surely the UK has to find a way of getting people from the
North to the South of our small island without having to fly… It seems like if
you live north of Birmingham you are expected to stay there.”
Another business
traveller commented: “I have lost all trust in Avanti [the West Coast mainline
operator] and stopped going to events in London unless I can travel the
previous day.”
The Business Travel
Association's commercial director Andrew Clarke confirms that “trips down to
London are crazily expensive”. A price spot-check by the BTA found a flight
from Manchester was £68 for a day return versus a cheapest rail fare of £158. Less
environmentally desirable car rental and domestic air bookings are both up, he
adds.
Even without the
year-long industrial action by some UK rail staff, overstretched capacity on the West
Coast line means cancellations and delays are routine. Service between the major
cities of the North is, if anything, worse.
“The lack
of resilience of the infrastructure, which is very old, is what causes the
issues,” says Shaun Hinds, chief executive of Manchester Central, the event venue
which hosted the Conservative Party conference. “Leeds-Manchester should be a
shuttle you can jump on every 15 minutes and takes 25-30 minutes [instead it
takes 72 minutes]. The line is riddled with issues. Parts of the North’s network
still aren’t electrified.”
HS2
was intended to modernise rail services both between the North and South of the country and between cities within the North. Not
only was Manchester-London going to take 71 minutes instead of 135 minutes
today – when on time – but “HS2 was enabling us to have more capacity, freeing
up the existing mainline” to serve local routes better, says Hinds.
What
is more, Hinds adds, “We have been talking about a ‘Northern Powerhouse Rail’ to
improve connectivity between Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield and Manchester. HS2
was critical to that because there were parts of its infrastructure that
Northern Powerhouse Rail could have ridden on the back of and in some cases
relied upon, whether it be an interchange, junction, viaduct or signalling.”
For Pat McDonagh, CEO of
Manchester-based travel management company Clarity, “the big loss with the
removal of the Manchester link of HS2 is the connectivity to Manchester
Airport. It was going to have a station on HS2 prior to Manchester and would
have extended the catchment area for the airport by 20 million passengers,” he
says.
“You would have been
able to attract airlines which maybe wouldn’t have considered Manchester before
as an option, and routes that weren’t believed to be viable. We didn’t
necessarily need to make it easier to travel from Manchester to London. It’s
that missed opportunity for Manchester as a global hub that I think is lost.”
Sunak cited massive cost
and time overruns as the primary reasons for cancelling the northern arm of
HS2, while also claiming business rail travel has halved since the pandemic.
The Railway Industry Association disputes this assertion, saying that passenger
numbers exceeded pre-Covid levels on 14 days out of 30 in April 2023.
McDonagh and Hinds accept
snowballing costs gave Sunak a strong
case to scrap HS2 to Manchester. “But at the same time we can be disappointed
we are not going to have this,” says McDonagh. “It is lamentable that we can’t
build modern high-speed rail infrastructure where others in Europe have done
it so successfully. It suggests a lack of vision, capability and commitment
from us as the nation that was the birthplace of the railways.”
Mark Harris, director of
business travel consultancy Travel Intelligence Network, is a regular commuter
to London wearing his other occupational hat as chair of the Football
Association Alliance Committee.
Harris feels the message
from London is clear. “The decision is symbolic of a consistent contempt for
the North of England,” he says. “There are bound to be cost overruns. I can’t
remember an infrastructure project in this country that hasn’t run hugely over
budget.”
Harris detects the same
contempt in the alternative Network North strategy that Sunak revealed last
week in Manchester, when the Prime Minister pledged to spend all the money
earmarked for the HS2 extension on a series of smaller transport infrastructure
investments. Examples include electrification of lines from Sheffield to
Manchester, Leeds and Hull, and a new Bradford-Manchester line, but also
projects much farther afield – even in Devon and Somerset in the South West of the country.
“It’s hard to avoid
being cynical about the so-called Network North project. It looks like the government
has dug a pile of rejected old projects out of a cupboard and dusted them
down,” Harris says. “Bizarrely, the Network North plan includes the upgrading
of a road near Bognor.”
Harris also pour scorn
on the Network North plan including projects already completed, including the Metrolink
extension from Manchester city centre to the airport which opened nine years
ago. “Although on the one hand the argument for ditching HS2 to Manchester is
probably incontrovertible, it is the way the government has gone about trying
to buy off the natives with a few glass baubles that rankles,” he says.
Speaking to BTN Europe, Raymond
is also sceptical about Network North. “If they feel the new projects are a
priority, why have they not consulted with the local governments that will be
benefiting?” he asks. “How can anyone in Manchester trust the rail service to a
government that has just extended the West Coast contract with Avanti, a rail
operator that has failed the North consistently since it took over the
franchise? I despair about the trick of ‘levelling up’ that has been played on
us up here.”
The BTA's Clarke
is not a fan of Network North either. While he can see benefits for commuters and
leisure travellers, he believes the absence of a coherent new inter-city service,
either north-south or trans-Pennine, means “business travellers have been
sacrificed. They’re
not connecting up and giving the structural change that HS2 would have brought.
It’s great individual cities are getting money but the chances of them being
unified in how they spend it is pretty remote.”
Clarity’s McDonagh can’t help but
compare the current predicament with the achievements of the 19th-century
rail pioneers who brought so much prosperity to the North. “Isambard Kingdom
Brunel and George Stephenson would be spinning in their graves,” he says.