This from today's Independent...
The Department for Transport spent "between £300,000 and £400,000 last year" on mothballed facilities for the aborted Regional Eurostar project that would have provided a direct link between provincial cities and the Continent.
An industry 'cost' that evidently slipped below McNulty's radar.
Perhaps just as well that his Value for Money study didn't delve too deeply into our very own Department for Transfer.
Monday, 10 October 2011
IEP - The saga drags on
This from Howard Wade...
A good question from the Railway Lord.
Lord Bradshaw (Liberal Democrat)
To ask Her Majesty's Government how many fewer bi-mode trains would be required to be built if the services between Paddington and Newbury and Paddington and Oxford were covered by electrical multiple unit trains and all services to the West of England via Newbury, beyond Oxford and those via Cheltenham continued to be life extended High Speed trains.
Earl Attlee (Whip, House of Lords; Conservative)
It is currently envisaged that rolling stock will be deployed as follows:
As Douglas Jay once remarked of his father: 'His capacity for saying nothing was absolutely pre-eminent'.
A good question from the Railway Lord.
Lord Bradshaw (Liberal Democrat)
To ask Her Majesty's Government how many fewer bi-mode trains would be required to be built if the services between Paddington and Newbury and Paddington and Oxford were covered by electrical multiple unit trains and all services to the West of England via Newbury, beyond Oxford and those via Cheltenham continued to be life extended High Speed trains.
Earl Attlee (Whip, House of Lords; Conservative)
It is currently envisaged that rolling stock will be deployed as follows:
- a mixture of electric Intercity Express Programme (IEP) and electric multiple unit trains for services between Paddington and Newbury and Paddington and Oxford;
- new IEP bi-mode trains for services beyond Oxford, and those running via Cheltenham;
- and life-extended vehicles from the current high speed train fleet for services to the West of England, via Newbury.
As Douglas Jay once remarked of his father: 'His capacity for saying nothing was absolutely pre-eminent'.