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Plan announced for Scotland to gain from HS2 rail line | Plan announced for Scotland to gain from HS2 rail line |
(about 9 hours later) | |
A study aiming to increase the benefits to Scotland of the HS2 rail project has been announced by the UK government. | A study aiming to increase the benefits to Scotland of the HS2 rail project has been announced by the UK government. |
The work by HS2 Ltd suggests high-speed services to Scotland and the north of England will start as soon as Phase One opens in 2026. | The work by HS2 Ltd suggests high-speed services to Scotland and the north of England will start as soon as Phase One opens in 2026. |
UK transport minister Baroness Kramer said the project would "bring the UK together". | |
Scottish transport minister Keith Brown said he was "excited" to work with the UK government on the plan. | Scottish transport minister Keith Brown said he was "excited" to work with the UK government on the plan. |
Phase One will consist of a new high speed rail line between London and the West Midlands, with a completion date of 2026. | |
When Phase Two is completed in 2032/33, lines will run to Manchester and Leeds, the government has said. | |
In June the government revised the estimated cost of building the high-speed link between London and the North of England from £32.7bn to £42.6bn. | In June the government revised the estimated cost of building the high-speed link between London and the North of England from £32.7bn to £42.6bn. |
Phase one will see journey times between London and Glasgow/Edinburgh reduced from four hours 48 minutes to four hours, while these times will fall further to three hours 38 minutes when the phase two is up and running. | |
The UK government, which has been holding talks with Transport Scotland, has instructed HS2 Ltd to look at further rail capacity and journey time improvements for northern England and Scotland. | The UK government, which has been holding talks with Transport Scotland, has instructed HS2 Ltd to look at further rail capacity and journey time improvements for northern England and Scotland. |
This is to include the possibility of eventual journey times from Glasgow and Edinburgh to London of three hours or less. | This is to include the possibility of eventual journey times from Glasgow and Edinburgh to London of three hours or less. |
'Huge benefits' | 'Huge benefits' |
Baroness Kramer said: "Our goal for HS2 is for a truly national network that will bring the UK and its cities closer together. | Baroness Kramer said: "Our goal for HS2 is for a truly national network that will bring the UK and its cities closer together. |
"We are driving forward HS2 because the benefits it will bring are huge. Without it we face a crisis in capacity on our rail network. | "We are driving forward HS2 because the benefits it will bring are huge. Without it we face a crisis in capacity on our rail network. |
"But it is also about connectivity, across the UK 18 cities including Glasgow and Edinburgh will be better connected because of HS2." | "But it is also about connectivity, across the UK 18 cities including Glasgow and Edinburgh will be better connected because of HS2." |
Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael added: "Today's announcement is good news for Scotland." | Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael added: "Today's announcement is good news for Scotland." |
For the Scottish government, Keith Brown called on Mr Carmichael to "unequivocally" back Scotland's inclusion in the HS2 network. | For the Scottish government, Keith Brown called on Mr Carmichael to "unequivocally" back Scotland's inclusion in the HS2 network. |
Mr Brown said: "High speed rail has the potential to bring huge economic benefits to Scotland, but also adds Scotland's economic weight to the overall case for high speed rail across Britain. | Mr Brown said: "High speed rail has the potential to bring huge economic benefits to Scotland, but also adds Scotland's economic weight to the overall case for high speed rail across Britain. |
"So we are excited to work in partnership with the UK government to examine options for bringing high speed rail to Scotland, creating benefit for all and complementing the Glasgow-Edinburgh line which the Scottish government is already planning. | |
"I look forward to reviewing the report of the investigation with UK ministers next year and together decide on the next steps." | "I look forward to reviewing the report of the investigation with UK ministers next year and together decide on the next steps." |
Emma Crane, the Scotland campaign manager of the HS2 Action Alliance, told the BBC's Good Morning Scotland programme: "It is very important for the Westminster government for Scotland to approve of this project. But if you have a look at the facts and the benefits for Scotland, they don't really stack up at all. | |
"92% of all rail journeys in Scotland begin and end in Scotland. There is very little cross-border travel so anything like this is not going to benefit a large proportion of the Scottish population." | |
She added: "It is a London-centric policy which is going to cost Scotland a huge amount of money." |