From
the I this morning - a longish quote from a very long article which I urge you to read
Britain’s rail crisis is getting worse with more than 1,000 train cancellations a day amid growing fears over crumbling infrastructure and ageing carriages, i can reveal.
Latest Office of Rail and Road data analysed by i shows in the 12 weeks between 12 November, 2023 and 3 February, 2024, an average of 1,062 trains a day were cancelled in England and Wales.
There has been a sharp increase in train cancellations in recent weeks, with the figures representing a 54 per cent rise on the rest of 2023/24 where 690 trains a day were cancelled between 1 April and 11 November last year.
The UK▸ ’s worst-performing rail operators have seen cancellations soar in recent weeks. Meanwhile, ScotRail also saw an increase in cancellations from 56 a day between April and November to 67 a day between November and February.
Rail bosses have blamed a combination of stormy weather, strike action and lack of staff for the poor service during the winter months and admitted performance has not been “as good as it should be”.
Meanwhile, industry insiders have warned a backlog in track repairs is putting safety at risk and that staff fear a “major incident” on the railways in the next two years.
A drop-off in orders of new rolling stock also means passengers could still be riding outdated trains built in the 90s into the next decade, with experts estimating more than 2,000 trains – around one in six of the total across the country – could be 35 years old by 2030.
It comes as the industry continues to deal with spending constraints imposed by the Government after it received £16bn in subsidies when passenger numbers collapsed during the pandemic.
According to reports which have not been disputed by the Department for Transport, railway companies were told to cut costs by 10 per cent in 2022.
There was little mention of public transport investment in Chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s Budget on Wednesday and campaigners fear rail users are being driven away in the long-term by poor experience.
While rail fares went up by 4.9 per cent on Sunday, Mr Hunt announced fuel duty would be frozen for the fourteenth year in a row.