Dithering & long processes make the UK’s infrastructure too expensive (SamDumitriu)

Unachievable.” The Infrastructure and Projects Authority’s assessment of High Speed 2 (HS2) does not pull its punches. Back in 2013, the high-speed line to connect London, Birmingham, Manchester and Leeds was estimated to cost about £56.7bn in 2023 prices. But this proved to be a massive underestimate. The 134 miles of track between London and Birmingham alone is now forecast to cost £53bn, and at £396m per mile Phase 1 of HS2 is one of the world’s most expensive railways.

Some of the mismanagement of the project would be comical, if it wasn’t so tragic. Take the recent news that two multi-million pound tunnel boring machines will be buried at Old Oak Common until a decision about whether to extend the line to Euston station is reached.

Much has been written about how HS2’s budget grew so large. Yet even if the 2013 estimate had been correct, HS2 would still stand out. At £165m per mile, it would still be more than double the price Italy is paying to build a high speed connection between Naples and Bari. It would also be 3.7 times more expensive than France’s high-speed link between Tours and Bordeaux. One reason HS2’s cost is high is the amount of tunneling involved, yet in Japan, bullet trains travel on Hokkaido’s new Shinkansen line built at just £50m per mile despite almost half of the Hokkaido line being tunneled.

It would be unfair, however, to single out HS2. Britain Remade, the pro-growth campaign group where we both work, has looked at 138 tram, metro, and rail projects across 14 countries (data) plus 104 road projects in 11 countries (data).

The reality is that infrastructure of all kinds, from railways to roads, tramlines to tubes, is more expensive to build in the UK.

NB. To allow for comparison over decades, all figures for cost (except stated otherwise) have been inflation adjusted to 2023 GBP.

Trams

In the last 25 years, France has built 21 tramways. AvignonBesançon, and Caen have all seen tramways out of use since the 1950s, rebuilt and reopened in the last decade. All three places have tramways despite having fewer than 150,000 residents living in their city proper. None of them have more than 500,000 people living in their wider metropolitan area. In population terms, it is the equivalent of Lincoln, Winchester, and Carlisle all having tram systems. 

Infamously, Leeds is the largest city in western Europe without a metro system. Over 530,000 people live in the city but have to make do with buses. Another 300,000 or so live in the wider metropolitan area and have to choose between an unreliable local rail network or congested roads.

So how has France been able to have a tram renaissance, and why can’t Britain do the same? Britain Remade has looked at 21 tram projects in Britain and France. After adjusting for inflation, we found that tram projects in Britain are two and a half times more expensive than French projects on a per mile basis.

Leeds saw a proposed “Supertram” cancelled in 2005 after construction costs doubled to £1bn (£1.6bn in 2023 prices). On a per-mile basis, it would have been more than 2 times more expensive than the average French tramway (though still cheaper than most recent British projects).

What about the trams Britain has actually built in recent memory? There’s Edinburgh’s controversial tram. The 11.5 mile project cost £1bn and took 12 years to finish. More than £13m has been spent on an inquiry into how a project that in 2007 was estimated to cost £375m (for an initial 14.5km) more than doubled to £776m when it opened in 2014 – a cost of £87m per mile.

Or take the Trafford Park Line extension to Manchester’s Metrolink. The 3.4 mile extension completed in 2020 cost £406m to build. That’s £119m per mile. Not as much as the £252m per cost of Metrolink’s Second City Crossing through Manchester city centre, but still 4 times more per mile than Besançon’s tramway.

The West Midlands Metro was meant to have been extended from Wednesbury to Brierley Hill by 2022. It now will only go 4 miles to Dudley and won’t be completed till 2025 at the earliest. Later stages of the project are in doubt after the 6.8 mile project’s total cost grew by over £100m to £550m (£89m per mile).

Nottingham’s phase 2 extension is a rare bright spot for British trams, coming in at £66m per mile, which is the cheapest of any of the British trams covered. However this is still £6m more than the most expensive French tramway covered, Orleans’s Line B. 

Some French projects stand out. Besançon’s tramway cost just £28m per mile and was built six months ahead of schedule. How were they able to keep costs so low? They rejected complexity at all stages and focused on standardisation wherever possible. Over 40,000 passengers ride the trams in Besançon each day and an expansion is underway to deal with overcrowding. In some cases, French cities work together on procurement to cut costs further.

Tubes

The Elizabeth Line is a roaring success. Only months after opening, it has become the busiest railway in Britain. At peak time, it moves around 36,000 people per hour. Building the Elizabeth Line (also known as Crossrail) was undoubtedly the right decision. Yet at a cost of £15.8bn (£18.1bn in 2023 prices) for just the core central tunnelled section from Paddington to Abbey Wood and Stratford, it is one of the world’s most expensive metro systems. Only New York can beat its staggering £1.392bn per mile cost.

The recent Northern Line Extension to Battersea was less expensive, but at a cost of £1.1bn (£1.26bn in 2023 prices) for just two miles of track it certainly wasn’t cheap.

After adjusting for inflation, a few places standout. New York in the US is by far the world’s most expensive place to build. Yet, Britain does not do well either. At a cost of £676m per mile, British projects are 2 times more expensive than projects in Italy or France, 3 times more expensive than Germany, and a whopping 6 times more expensive than Spain. 

In the space of just eight years, Madrid built an entire 81 mile subway network at just £68m per mile. To put that into perspective, that’s nine times cheaper per mile than the Jubilee Line Extension built at roughly the same time. Infrastructure expert Bent Flyvberg attributes their incredible achievement to inexpensive standardised station designs, a reliance on tried-and-tested technology, and an approach to construction that prioritised speed. For instance, instead of hiring one tunnelling machine, they hired six and worked around the clock. Community groups were persuaded to accept this approach when the choice was framed as “a three-year or an eight-year tunnel-construction period.” 

More recently, Bilbao completed a new metro-line in 2016 at a cost of £90m per mile. Barcelona, by many metrics Europe’s densest city, added almost 30 miles of new underground line at a cost of £200m per mile. More expensive than other Spanish projects but still extremely cheap by London’s standards.

Spain stands out for their ability to build metro systems cheaply, but many places are able to build cheaply compared to the UK. Take Copenhagen, Denmark, which opened the 9.6 mile City Circle Line in 2019. At a total cost of £3.4bn or £350m per mile, the driverless line is nearly twice as cheap as the Northern line extension. Sweden, Norway, and Finland are all either constructing or have recently completed projects for even less.

If Britain could build as cheaply as Spain and the Nordics, a much wider range of transport would be affordable. Alon Levy, who researches the cost of building public transport infrastructure, created a map of what would be possible in London at Nordic costs. Instead of debating whether to build Crossrail 2, we would be ploughing onto Crossrail 3, 4 and 5.

London’s high costs make further underground rail systems seem unaffordable to the rest of the country. Yet if we could build at Nordic (or even better Spanish) costs, then a range of projects would open up. As well as Leeds, Bristol stands out as a large city without a metro system. Bristol’s council have been investigating the possibility of building an underground rail system, yet if the cost is £18bn as one consultancy’s report put it or even just the £7bn Bristol’s Mayor puts it at then the project’s a non-starter. 

Rail Electrification

In many northern towns and cities, rail links are crowded and unreliable. Part of the problem is clearly to do with our model of rail franchising where TOCs are not financially penalised for cancelling services at short notice. Yet, the infrastructure itself is a major problem too. Too few lines are electrified forcing commuters to rely on slower, dirtier, and less reliable diesel trains. Key routes such as Manchester to Sheffield, Leeds to Manchester via Bradford, and Leeds to York via Harrogate are still waiting for electrification.

The UK is a laggard on rail electrification. More than two-thirds (71%) of Italy’s railways are electrified, while less than two-fifths (38%) of ours are. Germany (61%) and France (55%) both do better than us. 

Electrifications should be a no-brainer. In the long-run, it will almost certainly reduce the costs of running the railways with environmental and reliability benefits to boot. When the Coalition entered office in 2010, they had bold plans for rail electrification. Yet schemes to electrify consistently went over budget. 

Take the electrification of the Great Western line from London to Swansea. The project’s budget expanded threefold. As a result, electrification from Cardiff to Swansea was curbed and the Midlands Mainline Upgrade scheme was cut back. 

Research from the Rail Industry Association highlights that electrification is delivered at a much lower cost in Germany, Switzerland and Denmark. In fact, they estimate that rail electrification can be delivered at between 33%-50% as cheap as many projects stretch to.

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One comment

  1. This article contains much detail on the high costs of projects in the UK compared to Europe but has very little depth in analysing the reasons and even less in identifying remedies. A range of problems are shown, but which of these are one offs and which are endemic to the British system. What is the average cost of each problem across the identified schemes? Are there examples of countries that have had cost problems in the past and have solved them, or at least part solved them? For example the UK once regarded Italy as notorious for corruption, but now that country appears able to build and open projects much more cheaply than UK. What has changed? What can the UK learn? It seems rather smug to think UK costs are all down to the effect of greater people power in the process. I doubt anyone in UK feels more in control of the downsides of big projects than similar groups across Europe.

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