Title: Network Rail - plans Post by: grahame on February 13, 2018, 12:25:17 Network Rail says it will cut train delays by 15% in £47bn plan
From The Guardian (https://www.theguardian.com/business/2018/feb/13/network-rail-train-delays-plan) Quote Network Rail says it will deliver a 15% reduction in train delays and almost 1,000 new services every day by 2021 under a £47.1bn five-year plan. But there are no fresh promises of major projects after massive budgetary overruns in the last five-year plan left many schemes abandoned or delayed. The bulk of the 209-24 budget will be spent on maintenance, operations and renewals to make the most of the existing railway. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: grahame on February 13, 2018, 12:28:13 Can we have 8 of those on the Swindon to Solent run please - 4 each way per day, upping the service from 9 to 13 on the least served section of the line. Odd that Network Rail are said to be delivering the services - we've been talking to the TOCs and DfT ...
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 13, 2018, 12:33:46 delivering the train *paths* I think.
There will be project investment - the Grauniad forgets that CP6 onwards, projects get authorised piecemeal, once they prove their worth, rather than at the start of each CP. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 13, 2018, 12:38:59 Report comes from ORR press release
Quote ORR seeks views on Network Rail’s strategic business plans for CP6 Network Rail strategic business plans (SBPs) for CP6 are now available on its website. In a letter that we have issued today, we are inviting you to give us your views on any high-level and material issues regarding the plans, to inform our assessment of the SBPs. Our SBP assessment will lead to our draft determination in June 2018, setting out our proposed decisions on what Network Rail should deliver in CP6 and the funding it should have for this. We will consult on our draft determination over the summer. As set out in the letter, we welcome views by close on 6 March 2018. We recognise that this is a relatively short period in which to respond. However, if comments are to inform our SBP assessment, we will need your feedback by this point. We are also only seeking high-level points. You may also wish to be aware that we have made some minor updates to our PR18 timetable. This forms part of our 2018 periodic review (PR18). PR18 will play an important role in determining what Network Rail should deliver in control period 6 (which we expect to cover 2019-2024), as well as the funding and incentives needed to support this. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 13, 2018, 14:11:18 and the NR document is here (https://www.networkrail.co.uk/feeds/network-rail-reveals-significant-investment-more-services-and-fewer-delays-in-its-five-year-plan/)
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 13, 2018, 14:15:49 From the BBC (https://www.bbc.com/news/amp/business-43044465?__twitter_impression=true)
Quote Network Rail to put new projects on hold Network Rail is to move away from big projects in its next five-year funding period in favour of spending its cash on maintaining its current network. Britain's rail and track operator has published its plan from 2019 to 2024. The company could spend up to £47bn, with the amount set aside for new schemes falling by 33% and the total for current improvements rising by 25%. It also hopes to increase the number of female employees by 50%, or more than 3,000, to about 9,500. Network Rail currently employs 38,000 people. 'More ambitious' Chief executive Mark Carne told the BBC that the new funding period would be "more focused on the day-to-day operations". He said: "The last five years has been about huge projects, like Thameslink, Crossrail, Great Western electrification and Edinburgh-Glasgow electrification. The next control period is slightly different." Mr Carne denied the move was a backwards step, adding: "I don't think it's less ambitious at all, I think it's in a way more ambitious. "We have 20,000 miles of track and 4,500,000 people every day who depend on the railway and I think it should be our primary responsibility to make sure that we run that network reliably and efficiently for them." Network Rail is to move away from big projects in its next five-year funding period in favour of spending its cash on maintaining its current network. Britain's rail and track operator has published its plan from 2019 to 2024. The company could spend up to £47bn, with the amount set aside for new schemes falling by 33% and the total for current improvements rising by 25%. It also hopes to increase the number of female employees by 50%, or more than 3,000, to about 9,500. Network Rail currently employs 38,000 people. 'More ambitious' Chief executive Mark Carne told the BBC that the new funding period would be "more focused on the day-to-day operations". He said: "The last five years has been about huge projects, like Thameslink, Crossrail, Great Western electrification and Edinburgh-Glasgow electrification. The next control period is slightly different." Mr Carne denied the move was a backwards step, adding: "I don't think it's less ambitious at all, I think it's in a way more ambitious. "We have 20,000 miles of track and 4,500,000 people every day who depend on the railway and I think it should be our primary responsibility to make sure that we run that network reliably and efficiently for them." A total of £18.5bn will go into the operation and maintenance side of the business and a similar amount will be allocated for renewing and replacing old infrastructure like signalling systems. There is £10.1bn set aside for new projects, with most of that likely to go on improving the line between Manchester and Leeds. That would probably go on upgrading existing tunnels, bridges and lines rather than a new Northern Powerhouse Railway. The previous plan was called the biggest investment in Britain's railways since the Victorian era, with large-scale electrification supposed to reduce the cost of trains, increase reliability and reduce carbon emissions. However, projects around the country have been shelved and Mr Carne added: "We've discovered the cost of electrification of the network is very expensive. It's very difficult to do because we have so little time to intervene and work on the network at night. So it's cost more to do that. In the meantime the trains are getting better." _________________________________________ Analysis: Victoria Fritz, BBC transport correspondent At first it was a footnote. Four years on, the boss of Network Rail, Mark Carne, may regret calling an accountancy change statistical. Transferring Network Rail's debt to the national balance sheet exposed its reliance on the money markets to cover shortfalls in funding. With the figleaf gone, the appetite to embark on big trophy projects has diminished. For now, Network Rail is going back to the bread and butter business of maintaining and renewing what it already owns. With greater funding comes greater scrutiny. A recently-launched body, the System Operator, sits within Network Rail to assess the feasibility of rail franchises as they come up for renewal. It is likely to have a busy few years ahead. ____________________________________________________ Mr Carne is stepping down from his £880,000 a year post later in 2018 and said: "By the time I leave I will have been in the job for four-and-a-half years. To do more than one five-year control period would be too much." He welcomed the idea that he could be replaced by a woman. "I think it would be great," he said. "We are hugely focused on increasing gender diversity and all forms of diversity in the rail industry and wouldn't it be wonderful to have a woman chief executive of the company? "In the last four years alone, we have increased the number of women working in our company by 42% so we're really focused on this. "I know, and I see it every day, that gender diverse teams just perform better than homogenous teams, so this is about great business performance as well as the moral and ethical responsibility to be fair." Does seem that NR has pretty much given up on developing new projects in CP6....bang go any new stations etc Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: SandTEngineer on February 13, 2018, 15:51:26 There will be project investment - the Grauniad forgets that CP6 onwards, projects get authorised piecemeal, once they prove their worth, rather than at the start of each CP. Trouble is there won't be any engineers to deliver it because they have all a) Retired; b) Been made redundant; c) Left the industry for other parts of the world..... :PThis is potentially the third cycle like this in the near 50 years I have been in the S&T industry, and once the skills have gone they are gone for good. But, hey-ho, its only a plan and hasn't been agreed by ORR yet...... Quote The publication of the Strategic Business Plan (SBP) is a major milestone in the ongoing process to determine Network Rail’s funding requirements for the five years to 2024 (Control Period 6, CP6). The plan represents Network Rail’s initial, but detailed view, following the publication of Governments’ (England & Wales and Scotland) high level output specifications (HLOS) and statements of funds available (SoFA). The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) will now review the plan and make a draft determination of Network Rail’s funding needs in June, and a final determination in the autumn. ...oh, and the link to the SBP on the NR site is broken. A bit like NR itself, actually...... ::) Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: stuving on February 13, 2018, 17:52:10 ...oh, and the link to the SBP on the NR site is broken. A bit like NR itself, actually...... ::) I did wonder if they'd felt the need to hide it, but if you do a search (and after two pointless further links) you get to this page of downloadable PDFs (https://www.networkrail.co.uk/who-we-are/publications-resources/strategicbusinessplan/). There's a distinct shortage of lists of things to do with dates and costs, but then previous SBPs were the same. But there are some, and for the Western route this is the bit most of interest here: Quote CP5 funded projects to GRIP 1-8 that will finish in CP6 The following schemes are CP5 schemes which have some final delivery expected in CP6. These schemes are post-FID and are included in this plan: Stations – Access for All (AfA) GWEp close-out/snagging A2A Enhanced Access Points 0-12mp CMEs and electronic securing A2A OLE campaign changes Crossrail close-out / snagging Filton Bank Four Tracking Interim Gatelines (Bristol Temple Meads) Bristol Parkway snagging DNO works Par and Tavistock MDUs Quote The table below shows the current position with respect to the “Hendy Tail”. The schemes in this table are still subject to a final investment decision and are not included in this plan: W001c Reading Independent Feeder (Bramley) W015 Bristol East Junction CR007 Acton to Willesden Electrification W001a Filton Bank Electrification W001a Wootton Bassett Jn to BTM Electrification W001a Didcot to Oxford Electrification W002a Western IEP Capability W003a Henley and Windsor Electrification (Thames Valley Branches) W003b Southcote to Basingstoke Electrification DNO clearance works associated with the following electrification schemes: W003a, W003b, CR007 W004 Thames Valley EMU Capability W005 Western Rail Link to Heathrow W006 Oxford Corridor Phase 2 W008 Bristol Temple Meads Capacity -platforms 0 &1 in Midland Shed W009 West of England DMU Capability W014 West of England Platform Extensions PS: I assume that when items on that last list are approved, they will be funded from the roughly £10Bn of enhancements funding in the SoFA and in this SBP. Mind you, I've not found any words that say exactly that. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 13, 2018, 18:27:36 I thought the branches electrification had *all been cancelled? Seems Windsor & Henley still have a chance?
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: SandTEngineer on February 13, 2018, 18:33:49 STUVING, thanks for finding the SBP links. A little bit of reading to do now..... :P
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: simonw on February 13, 2018, 18:34:17 Not a good announcement really.
Each CP should announce and implement
A maintenance CP with a few dozen small projects shows a lack of ambition and commitment to improve our rail infrastructure Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: stuving on February 13, 2018, 19:07:29 Not a good announcement really. Each CP should announce and implement
A maintenance CP with a few dozen small projects shows a lack of ambition and commitment to improve our rail infrastructure Network Rail are doing doing what they were told to. The decision to remove major projects from the 5-year CP regime was made some time ago, and confirmed in the HLOS. The funding in the SoFA followed that, but was more generous than that implies - a big increase in the renewals budget, to reflect the backlog that's built up. As to why NR wrote the SBPs as if they weren't just obeying orders, but it was all their own idea, I haven't a clue. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: SandTEngineer on February 13, 2018, 19:25:41 Personally, having speed read the Western Route SBP, its virtually confirmed to me that major projects are going to be run by others with NR as the 'at arms length' receiver of the finished product. Good news, and about time as well.....
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: stuving on February 13, 2018, 19:46:14 One of the side effects of churning out so many words is that you write something like this and don't spot it in the proof-reading (from WRSP P 103):
Level crossing safety reduction and asset improvement programme: Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 13, 2018, 20:11:35 Strewth, the high level doc was hard to find!
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: paul7575 on February 13, 2018, 20:24:25 I thought the branches electrification had *all been cancelled? Seems Windsor & Henley still have a chance? According to the regular CP 5 enhancement plans they were deferred until CP6. Swansea was the only section explicitly cancelled. Never stopped people assuming the worst of course...Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: stuving on February 13, 2018, 20:28:59 The telecomms plan is disappointing - it appears to exclude what they call "Extended use of telecoms infrastructure", which presumably covers the high-capacity links to trains.
I did find a suggestion that there have been problems with DOO we've not heard about. For a start, this item is listed under "Driver Operation Only (DOO) CCTV", and then: Quote There are currently issues with the supporting structures associated with DOO CCTV as a number have fallen over in public areas (Platforms). The funding would be making a large assumption that these asset could last a further 2 years however recent inspections and incidents point to this not being viable Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: JayMac on February 13, 2018, 21:39:35 Inevitable once governments past and present committed to HS2.
If that colossal waste of money hadn't been green lighted then much more pressing major projects for the existing network could have been funded. And no. I don't buy the capacity argument for HS2. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: eXPassenger on February 14, 2018, 10:20:10 One of the side effects of churning out so many words is that you write something like this and don't spot it in the proof-reading (from WRSP P 103): Level crossing safety reduction and asset improvement programme: and another item they missed was the date. The sign-offs are at the end of January 2018 and the front cover of the Route Strategic Plan states "Version 7... 2nd February 2017". Of course it may be an old document that they have just got around to signing. Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: bobm on February 14, 2018, 14:30:47 I don't buy the capacity argument for HS2. The amount of money it is costing, you couldn't afford it. ;D Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: Timmer on February 14, 2018, 14:58:52 And no. I don't buy the capacity argument for HS2. I don't either when more could be done to develop the Chiltern mainline.Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: ChrisB on February 14, 2018, 16:33:37 HS2 will go further. and it's the WCML that is full, not the Chiltern line that serves different towns enroute. So of little help to the WCML....although Chilterns pax would really like it done!
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: metalrail on April 18, 2018, 21:47:18 Quote W015 Bristol East Junction W001a Filton Bank Electrification W001a Wootton Bassett Jn to BTM Electrification W002a Western IEP Capability W008 Bristol Temple Meads Capacity -platforms 0 &1 in Midland Shed Great to see these are still all potentially on the table. Did wonder about the feasibility of starting the new direct IEP BRI-BPW-PAD service supposedly to be introduced in the December 2018 timetable before they sort out Bristol East Junction, along with the long planned re-opening of the Midland Shed with new platforms at BRI, tho obviously none of this will happen by then. At least now the signalling has finally shifted control to TVSC, platform 1 will now be able to be extended back to it's full length once Bristol power box that was supposed to be decommissioned back in 2015 is demolished And hopefully the decision on the new Ashley Hill / Horfield station will also be made by the time they come to electrify Filton bank! ;) Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: SandTEngineer on April 18, 2018, 22:09:36 Bristol Panel box is not likely to disappear anytime soon. See topic here: http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/coffeeshop/index.php?topic=16746.0
Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: metalrail on April 18, 2018, 22:14:57 Bristol Panel box is not likely to disappear anytime soon. See topic here: http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/coffeeshop/index.php?topic=16746.0 Thought it was too good to be true, I should know better! ;) Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: onthecushions on April 20, 2018, 19:00:56 There may be some green shoots of spring amongst the vast verbiage of these reports. The Wessex section includes something called the "South of England Electrification" - Wokingham - Reigate! (p35/6) and also electrification of, mysteriously, the "West of England line". The bottom of the electric spine is parked but not forgotten, for CP7 (p84). The LNE EM section talks also "electric traction between Market Harborough/Kettering and..."(p45). Also of "Electrification options of the route from Manchester Victoria to Leeds and on to York and Selby." (p44). The SEP's of the LEP's also haven't given up on electrification. (Appendix K ) Life beyond ORR and Grayling, OTC Title: Re: Network Rail - plans Post by: stuving on April 21, 2018, 22:48:35 There may be some green shoots of spring amongst the vast verbiage of these reports. The Wessex section includes something called the "South of England Electrification" - Wokingham - Reigate! (p35/6) and also electrification of, mysteriously, the "West of England line". The bottom of the electric spine is parked but not forgotten, for CP7 (p84). The LNE EM section talks also "electric traction between Market Harborough/Kettering and..."(p45). Also of "Electrification options of the route from Manchester Victoria to Leeds and on to York and Selby." (p44). The SEP's of the LEP's also haven't given up on electrification. (Appendix K ) Life beyond ORR and Grayling, OTC Well, I'd agree about the verbiage - what a lot of words, and for what purpose? And I'd note that NR's planning horizon is many SoSs, or parliaments, or (so it sometimes seems) lifetimes, in the future. As to why it includes those two electrification ideas, with the North Downs one listed as doing GRIP 1-3 in CP6, perhaps these are green eggs miscounted. All the big items of infrastructure are not now going to be theirs to do, and having edited those out there was this nearly empty table left. So whatever remains - however implausible - has been dignified as a line item. At the start of the much-delayed refresh of the electrification RUS, all possible schemes were assessed and ranked in six tiers. North Downs and WoE main line both came out as tier 2, which sounds promising. However, that only means a BCR of around 1.0 at best, so the funding decision (to start GRIP, not do the work) is still likely to be a "no". Incidentally, I also spotted this about Basingstoke ROC: "There are currently no signalling systems in the ROC but CP6 will see Feltham and Farncombe Petersfield being re-signalled to the ROC." I din't realise nothing at all had been recontrolled thither yet - Wokingham was supposed to go last year, but is now (it says elsewhere) also due to be resignalled in CP6. This page is printed from the "Coffee Shop" forum at http://gwr.passenger.chat which is provided by a customer of Great Western Railway. Views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that content provided contravenes our posting rules ( see http://railcustomer.info/1761 ). The forum is hosted by Well House Consultants - http://www.wellho.net |