"It should be noted that an efficient profiling workstream is considering all electrification projects and the outcome of this workstream may result in reprofiling the delivery dates of some electrification projects.".
I ran it through a little-known area of Google Translate, and it came up with this meaning:
Might be late.
As to the supplier of power:
As an aside, one of the major electricity suppliers in the late 1990s offered to electrify most of the old BR▸ Western Region in return for a 20 year supply contract. Railtrack said no thanks. I wonder how that could have worked out?
That deal, if done now, would be in breach of European Commision directives, intended to promote the ability of any
EU» -based company to to tender for any public service contract in any member state. I think the supply of electricity to a railway would fall under Directive 2004/17/EC[30] article 16(a), article 61, which states that any contract for utility supply and service with a value exceeding ^387,000 must be advertised in the Official Journal of the European Commission (OJEC) to enable tenders from across the EU. This directive was not in place in the late 1990s.
Some forummers may harrumph, and bemoan this interference in our day to day running of our own affairs - I make no comment. The stated intention behind the directives was to save around 0.5% of Europe's GNP by making big deals transparent, and eliminating cartels. This is done by opening contracts to more bidders, and having a single place to advertise invitations to tender. Other routes can still be used in addition, but a whole sub-industry has grown out of scrutiny of the OJEC for suitable tenders for clients, and the temptation to duplicate effort is low.
A deal to supply electricity is something I have trouble getting my head around. Let's assume only two tenders were received, both from household names in electricity supply. We'll call them by the first two letters of their names so they cannot be identified. ED* and nP* both have power plants in
UK▸ , but the electricity they provide may not necessarily come from those plants. They are plugging their plug into the same 13 amp socket. Presumably, then, this becomes a supply contract to the railway, and a whole load of purchase contracts with everyone else behind the scenes, including National Grid. All those are likely to quote the same price to both ED* and nP*, making the difference in price to the railway the difference in profit they will make. With the latest accession of states to the EU, there would be therefore nothing to prevent a coalition of Bulgarian and Maltese accountants, with absolutely no previous involvement in electricity supply, from tendering to broker the deal.
There's a lot of middle-men, and not a lot of logic, involved!