History of rail transport in Great Britain 1995 to date



The period from 1995 covers the history of rail transport in Great Britain following the privatisation of British Rail. During this period, passenger volumes have grown rapidly, safety has improved, and subsidies per journey have fallen. However, there is debate as to whether this is due to privatisation or to better government regulation. See impact of the privatisation of British Rail for more information. During this period, High Speed 1 and the West Coast Main Line upgrade were completed and more construction projects are currently under way.
and HS2.
Overall rail subsidies have risen, as shown in the graph, although spend per journey has decreased. Rail subsidies have increased from £bn in 1992–93 to £bn in 2015–16, although subsidy per journey has fallen from £ to £. However, this masks great regional variation: for instance, in 2014–15 funding varied from "£1.41 per passenger journey in England to £6.51 per journey in Scotland and £8.34 per journey in Wales."
Due to the increase in passenger numbers and the prospect of high speed rail both within Great Britain and connecting to Europe, this period has been called the start of a new Golden Age of rail travel. However quickly increasing passenger numbers have meant many trains are very crowded at peak times. Peak-time fares have increased by over 200% to deter people from travelling at these times, whereas the price of advance tickets has halved in the same period.

Government policy

Reform under the Labour government (1997–2010)

The Labour government did not completely reverse the railway privatisation of the previous administration. Initially it left the new structure largely in place, however its main innovation in the early years was the creation of the Strategic Rail Authority, initially in shadow form until the Transport Act 2000 received Royal Assent, as well as the appointment of Tom Winsor as Rail Regulator, who took a much harder line with the rail industry, and Railtrack in particular.
In the wake of the Hatfield rail crash in 2000, Railtrack entered into financial meltdown and the industry was in deep crisis. Labour refused to continue to bail out Railtrack and the company was put into Railway Administration in 2001 and a new company, Network Rail emerged to replace Railtrack in 2002. Since September 2014, Network Rail has been classified as a "government body".
The Strategic Rail Authority lasted just five years. Following the passing of the Railways Act 2005, its business was wound up and its functions transferred to the Department for Transport Rail Group and the Office for Rail Regulation. Further changes followed, which saw the government take back a greater degree of control.
Another important development occurred in the aftermath of the Potters Bar accident in May 2002 when a commuter train derailed due to poorly maintained points. This resulted in Network Rail taking all track maintenance back in-house and the industry went on to enjoy the longest period in modern times without a fatal accident due to industry error. This came to an end in February 2007 when a Virgin Trains West Coast Class 390 Pendolino derailed near Grayrigg in Cumbria, killing one person. The cause of the accident was identical to that in Potters Bar nearly five years earlier – once again calling into question Network Rail's maintenance procedures.
In 2007, the government's preferred option was to use diesel trains running on biodiesel, its White Paper Delivering a Sustainable Railway, ruling out large-scale Railway electrification in Great Britain for the following five years.
Following Gordon Brown's appointment as Prime Minister in 2007, Andrew Adonis was appointed Transport Secretary. He immediately began work on plans for a new high-speed route between London and Birmingham, which would augment the West Coast Main Line. Adonis also announced plans to electrify the Great Western Main Line from London as far as Swansea, as well as infill electrification schemes in the North West of England to remove diesel traction from certain key routes. Late in 2009, the InterCity East Coast franchise collapsed for the second time in three years when incumbent operator National Express East Coast proved unable to meet its financial obligations. Adonis transferred the franchise to the state-owned Directly Operated Railways to operate the route under its East Coast subsidiary.

Reform under the Coalition government (2010–2015)

After the 2010 General Election, the new Conservative led Coalition continued Labour's rail policies largely unaltered after a pause to review the finances. There was continuing support for the High Speed 2 scheme and further developing plans for the route, although great debate still rages over the scheme's benefits and costs. Whilst initially showing scepticism towards the electrification schemes of the Great Western route, they later gave the project its backing and work began formally in 2012. Plans were also mooted to electrify the remainder of the Midland Main Line.
In 2012, the franchising system again came under criticism after FirstGroup was awarded the InterCity West Coast franchise. Incumbent Virgin Rail Group initiated a judicial review against the decision, citing the fact that First's bid was even more ambitious than the one which had scuttled National Express East Coast less than three years earlier. Before the review took place however, newly-installed Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin scrapped the entire bidding process for the franchise and granted Virgin an extension to its contract when "severe technical flaws" were discovered in the original bidding competition.

The Conservative government (2015–present)

The Government has moved towards allowing more competition on the intercity network through open access operators. In 2015 it approved a service run by Alliance Rail Holdings to operate between London Euston and Blackpool, and in 2016 it allowed FirstGroup to run open access services on the East Coast Main Line from 2021 under the operating name East Coast Trains.
Much debate continues over annual fare increases, although the government has now pledged to keep regulated rail fare increases at Retail Prices Index inflation for the remainder of this Parliament. In addition much debate has continued over the financing of various rail schemes driven primarily by the huge cost and time overrun on the GWML route modernisation and electrification scheme. In connection with this, and to coincide with the Chancellor's Autumn statement in November 2015, the Bowe and Hendy reports were produced.
In March 2016, the National Infrastructure Commission said that Crossrail 2 should be taken forward "as a priority" and recommended that a bill should pass through Parliament by 2019 and the line should be open by 2033. Crossrail 2 is a North-South railway through London, similar to the East-West railway Crossrail which is currently under construction.
Since April 2016, the British railway network has been severely disrupted on many occasions by wide-reaching rail strikes, affecting rail franchises across the country. The industrial action began on Southern services as a dispute over the planned introduction of driver-only operation, and has since expanded to cover many different issues affecting the rail industry; as of February 2018, the majority of the industrial action remains unresolved, with further strikes planned. The scale, impact and bitterness of the nationwide rail strikes have been compared to the 1984–85 miners' strike by the media.
In July 2017, Chris Grayling, the secretary of state for transport announced a number of electrification schemes were to be suspended indefinitely citing the disruptive nature of electrification works and the availability of bi-mode technology. The schemes included aspects of the GWML including Cardiff to Swansea, the Midland Mainline from Kettering to Sheffield via Derby and Nottingham and Oxenholme to Windermere in the Lake District.
In February 2018, the five-year plan was published by Network Rail with significant investment though much of this was for renewals and smaller projects rather than major projects. In March 2019 the Railway Industry Association published a paper Electrification Cost Challenge.
In July 2019, the Urban Transport Group released a report that showed regional rail travel had experienced a 29% growth in the ten years to 2017/18.
On 24 July 2019, Grant Shapps was appointed Secretary of State for Transport under the new Prime Minister Boris Johnson

Infrastructure projects

Completed projects

The British railway system continues to be developed. Contemporary projects include:

2015

Dates after 2020 are plans, not events, and are subject to extensive revision.

Diesel locomotives

* BR Class 73 is an electro-diesel locomotive which allows electrified and non electrified route workings.

Electric locomotives

ImageClassOperatorImageClassOperator
86Freightliner88Direct Rail Services
90Abellio Greater Anglia
DB Cargo UK
• Freightliner
Locomotive Services Limited
91• London North Eastern Railway
92• DB Cargo UK
GB Railfreight
73a• GB Railfreight
• Network Rail
Eurotunnel Class 9• Eurotunnel---

a BR Class 73 and 88 are electro-diesel locomotives which allow both electrified and non electrified route workings.

Diesel multiple units

ImageClassOperatorImageClassOperator

142
143
144
• Great Western Railway
• Northern
• Transport for Wales
150• Great Western Railway
• Northern
• Transport for Wales
153• East Midlands Railway
• Northern
• Transport for Wales
• West Midlands Trains
155• Northern
156Abellio ScotRail
• East Midlands Railway
• Northern
158
159
• Abellio ScotRail
• East Midlands Railway
• Great Western Railway
•Northern
• South Western Railway
• Transport for Wales
165
166
168
Chiltern Railways
• Great Western Railway
170
171
172
• Abellio ScotRail
CrossCountry
• Northern
• West Midlands Trains
• Southern
• Transport for Wales
175• Transport for Wales180• East Midlands Railway
Grand Central
185• TransPennine Express
195
• Northern
196• West Midlands Railway 220
221
222
• Avanti West Coast
• CrossCountry
• East Midlands Railway
230London Northwestern Railway

AC electric multiple units

ImageClassOperatorImageClassOperator
315• London Overground
• TfL Rail

317
318
• Abellio Greater Anglia
• London Overground
• Abellio ScotRail
320
321
322

• Abellio Greater Anglia
• Abellio ScotRail
• Northern
323• Northern
• West Midlands Trains
331• Northern-
332
333
• Heathrow Express
• Northern
334• Abellio ScotRail
345• TfL Rail350• West Midlands Trains
357• c2c360• Abellio Greater Anglia
• TfL Rail
365• Great Northern373
374
Eurostar

379
• Abellio Greater Anglia380• Abellio ScotRail
385• Abellio ScotRail---
390• Avanti West Coast397• TransPennine Express

Dual AC/DC electric multiple units

DC electric multiple units

Bi-mode diesel/electric multiple units

ImageClassOperator
800•Avanti West Coast
•East Midlands Railway
• Great Western Railway
• London North Eastern Railway
801• Avanti West Coast
• London North Eastern Railway
802• Great Western Railway
Hull Trains
• TransPennine Express

Coaches

Details of withdrawn locomotives and rolling stock: See article Withdrawn British Rail stock

Future rolling stock