Aside from causing chaos with the fares system by the late reduction of January's average regulated fare increase to RPI+1 (down from Petrol-heads eye watering RPI+3) there are one or two additional jee-jaws to delight.
The simultaneous publication of the 2011 National Infrastructure Plan lists the following in section 3.c Network Rail Schemes:
New infrastructure projects
- North Trans Pennine electrification
- New rail link between Oxford, Bicester, Aylesbury, Milton Keynes and Bedford
- Network Rail Discretionary Fund
- Funding for winter resilience measures
- Bridge renewals
So once released from Thameslink the Class 319 fleet will now be expected to cover almost as much ground as Santa on Christmas Eve!
UPDATE: This from the Transport Select Committee...
Following the Autumn Statement made on 29 November, the Transport Committee will be taking oral evidence from the Secretary of State for Transport.
Wednesday 14 December 2011, 5.05 pm
Committee Room 8
Witness: Rt Hon Justine Greening MP, Secretary of State for Transport
Good to see that Louise Ellman and co are on their toes.
UPDATE: The DfT have also published the Logistics Growth Review today...
Good news for Freighties!
In section 2.30 DfT commits £55m of investment to developing a Strategic Freight Network:
The Government is making available funding for an investment of £55m for the Strategic Rail Freight Network (SFN) allowing delivery of schemes that remove bottlenecks and improve capability and longer term connectivity to the UK’s major ports.
These are: the Ely – Soham doubling scheme that will remove a bottleneck on the Felixstowe-Nuneaton route, improving both freight and passenger capacity and reliability on this section of the route and increasing the attractiveness of freight paths between Felixstowe and Nuneaton, reducing demand for paths on more heavily congested routes via London; and
Gauge clearance of additional rail freight routes in the Midlands between Syston Junction (just north of Leicester) and Stoke that will allow existing freight capacity to be used more efficiently by enabling the routes to carry 9ft 6in 'hi-cube' containers - which otherwise require specialist rail wagons or carriage by road. These schemes will improve access to Felixstowe and Southampton ports and the new port at London Gateway, as well as northern locations including Liverpool.
Details here.