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Wikipedia

Rail transport in Great Britain

The railway system in Great Britain is the oldest railway system in the world. The first locomotive-hauled public railway opened in 1825, which was followed by an era of rapid expansion. Most of the track is managed by Network Rail, which in 2017 had a network of 9,824 miles (15,811 km) of standard-gauge lines, of which 3,339 miles (5,374 km) were electrified.[3][4] These lines range from single to quadruple track or more. In addition, some cities have separate metro, light rail and tram systems (including the extensive and historic London Underground). There are also many private railways (some of them narrow-gauge), which are primarily short lines for tourists. The main rail network is connected with that of continental Europe by the Channel Tunnel and High Speed 1 (originally the Channel Tunnel Rail Link), which fully opened in 1994 and 2007 respectively.

Rail transport in Great Britain
Trains at London Paddington, one of Great Britain's busiest stations
Operation
Infrastructure companyNetwork Rail (until 2024)
Major operators
  • National Rail franchisees
  • Independent operators
  • State-owned operators
Statistics
Ridership1.738 billion (2019/20)[1]
Passenger km41.5 mi (66.8 km) billion (2019/20)[2]
System length
Total9,824 mi (15,811 km)[3][4]
Electrified3,339 mi (5,374 km)[3][4]
Features
No. stations2,576[5][6]

In 2019, there were 1.738 billion journeys on the National Rail network,[1] making the British network the fifth most used in the world (Great Britain ranks 23rd in world population). Unlike a number of other countries, rail travel in the United Kingdom has enjoyed a renaissance in recent years, with passenger numbers approaching their highest ever level (see usage figures below). This has coincided with the privatisation of British Rail, but the cause of this increase is unclear. The growth is partly attributed to a shift away from private motoring due to growing road congestion and increasing petrol prices, but also to the overall increase in travel due to affluence.[7] Passenger journeys in Britain grew by 88% over the period 1997–98 to 2014 as compared to 62% in Germany, 41% in France and 16% in Spain.[8]

The United Kingdom is a member of the International Union of Railways (UIC). The UIC country code for United Kingdom is 70. The UK has the 17th largest railway network in the world; despite many lines having closed in the 20th century, due to the Beeching cuts, it remains one of the densest networks. It is one of the busiest railways in Europe, with 20% more train services than France, 60% more than Italy, and more than Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Portugal and Norway combined, as well as representing more than 20% of all passenger journeys in Europe.[9] The rail industry employs 115,000 people and supports another 250,000 through its supply chain.[10]

After the initial period of rapid expansion following the first public railways in the early 19th century, from about 1900 onwards the network suffered from gradual attrition, and more severe rationalisation in the 1950s and 1960s. However, the network has again been growing since the 1980s. The UK was ranked eighth among national European rail systems in the 2017 European Railway Performance Index for intensity of use, quality of service and safety performance.[11] To cope with increasing passenger numbers, there is a large programme of upgrades to the network, including Thameslink, Crossrail, electrification of lines, in-cab signalling, new inter-city trains and new high-speed lines.

Historical overview edit

 
Current railway lines in Ireland, the United Kingdom and the Isle of Man are shown in black, metro lines in red, and former routes in green
 
Rail passengers in Great Britain from 1829 to 2023, showing the early era of small railway companies, the amalgamation into the "Big Four", nationalisation and finally the current era of privatisation

According to historians David Brandon and Alan Brooke, the railways brought into being our modern world:

They stimulated demand for building materials, coal, iron and, later, steel. Excelling in the bulk movement of coal, they provided the fuel for the furnaces of industry and for domestic fireplaces. Millions of people were able to travel who had scarcely ever travelled before. Railways enabled mail, newspapers, periodicals and cheap literature to be distributed easily, quickly and cheaply allowing a much wider and faster dissemination of ideas and information. They had a significant impact on improving diet....[and enabled] a proportionately smaller agricultural industry was able to feed a much larger urban population....They employed huge quantities of labour both directly and indirectly. They helped Britain to become the 'Workshop of the World' by reducing transport costs not only of raw materials but of finished goods, large amounts of which were exported....[T]oday's global corporations originated with the great limited liability railway companies....By the third quarter of the nineteenth century, there was scarcely any person living in Britain whose life had not been altered in some way by the coming of the railways. Railways contributed to the transformation of Britain from a rural to a predominantly urban society.[12]

The railways started with the local isolated wooden wagonways in 1560s using horses. These wagonways then spread, particularly in mining areas. The system was later built as a patchwork of local lines operated by small private railway companies. Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries, these amalgamated or were bought by competitors until only a handful of larger companies remained (see Railway Mania). The entire network was brought under government control during the First World War and a number of advantages of amalgamation and planning were revealed. However, the government resisted calls for the nationalisation of the network (first proposed by 19th century Prime Minister William Gladstone as early as the 1830s). Instead, from 1 January 1923, almost all the remaining companies were grouped into the "big four": the Great Western Railway, the London and North Eastern Railway, the London Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway companies (there were also a number of other joint railways such as the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway and the Cheshire Lines Committee as well as special joint railways such as the Forth Bridge Railway, Ryde Pier Railway and at one time the East London Railway). The "Big Four" were joint-stock public companies and they continued to run the railway system until 31 December 1947.

The growth in road transport during the 1920s and 1930s greatly reduced revenue for the rail companies. Rail companies accused the government of favouring road haulage through the subsidised construction of roads. The railways entered a slow decline owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles. During World War II, the companies' managements joined together, effectively forming one company. A maintenance backlog developed during the war and the private sector only had two years to deal with this after the war ended. After 1945, for both practical and ideological reasons, the government decided to bring the rail service into the public sector.

Nationalisation edit

From the start of 1948, the "big four" were nationalised to form British Railways (latterly British Rail) under the control of the British Transport Commission. Although BR was a single entity, it was divided into six (later five) regional authorities in accordance with the existing areas of operation. Though there were few initial changes to the service, usage increased and the network became profitable. Regeneration of track and railway stations was completed by 1954. In the same year, changes to the British Transport Commission, including the privatisation of road haulage, ended the coordination of transport in Great Britain. Rail revenue fell and in 1955 the network again ceased to be profitable. The mid-1950s saw the rapid introduction of diesel and electric rolling stock, but the expected transfer back from road to rail did not occur and losses began to mount.

The desire for profitability led to a major reduction in the network during the mid-1960s, with ICI manager Dr. Richard Beeching commissioned by the government under Ernest Marples with reorganising the railways. Many branch lines (and a number of main lines) were closed because they were deemed uneconomic ("the Beeching Axe" of 1963), removing much feeder traffic from main line passenger services. In the second Beeching report of 1965, only the "major trunk routes" were selected for large-scale investment, leading many to speculate the rest of the network would eventually be closed. This was never implemented by BR.

Passenger services experienced a renaissance with the introduction of the InterCity 125 trains in the 1970s. Passenger levels fluctuated since then, increasing during periods of economic growth and falling during recessions. The 1980s saw severe cuts in government funding and above-inflation increases in fares,[13] In the early 1990s, the five geographical Regions were replaced by a Sectored organisation, in which passenger services were organised into InterCity, Network SouthEast and Regional Railways sectors.

Reorganisation and privatisation edit

The Railways Act 1993[14] divided the railways up, with Railtrack taking ownership of British Rail's property portfolio, tracks, signals, bridges and tunnels, Rolling Stock Operating Companies, and train operating companies.

Passenger transport services were bundled together into franchises to facilitate cross-subsidy within franchises, with many regulations on ticket prices and types, regulated fare increases and "Parliamentary service" obligations. Companies submit bids to the franchising authority - often the Secretary of State for Transport, Passenger Transport Authority, or devolved government - competing for the lowest subsidy requirement and to invest in the railway over the lifespan of the franchise. There is also provision for subsidy between franchises, with profitable franchises demanding payments made to the government to cover a share of the losses from others. Examples of franchises include ScotRail, Great Western, and Southern Trains.

Open Access Operators are entirely free to set their own services and fares unaffected by government regulations. Examples of such operators are Lumo and Grand Central, Hull Trains and Heathrow Express. In the case of the InterCity West Coast and InterCity East Coast franchises, applicants submit bids to return the most money to the government from operating the service. This has led to franchisees collapsing when passenger growth targets are not met as promised payments to the government cannot be paid and the franchise is exited early.

In 2023, Network Rail held over £59.1 billion in debt, and £1.176 billion interest payments.[15] Many of these debts were incurred by Railtrack and transferred to Network Rail when it collapsed.

British Rail operations were privatised during 1994–1997. Ownership of the track and infrastructure passed to Railtrack, whilst passenger operations were franchised to individual private sector operators (originally there were 25 franchises) and the goods services sold outright (six companies were set up, but five of these were sold to the same buyer). The government said privatisation would see an improvement in passenger services and satisfaction (according to the National Rail Passenger survey) has indeed gone up from 76% in 1999 (when the survey started) to 83% in 2013 and the number of passengers not satisfied with their journey dropped from 10% to 6%.[16] Since privatisation, passenger levels have more than doubled, and have surpassed their level in the late 1940s. Train fares cost 2.7% more than under British Rail in real terms on average.[17] However, while the price of anytime and off-peak tickets has increased, the price of Advance tickets has dramatically decreased in real terms: the average Advance ticket in 1995 cost £9.14 (in 2014 prices) compared to £5.17 in 2014.[18]

 
Rail fatalities per billion passenger-km in European countries during 2013.

Rail subsidies have increased from £2.9bn in 1992–93 to £3.8bn in 2015–16 (in current prices), although subsidy per journey has fallen from £3.85 per journey to £2.19 per journey.[17][19] However, this masks great regional variation, as 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."[19]

The public image of rail travel was severely damaged by a series of significant accidents after privatisation. These included the Hatfield accident, caused by a rail fragmenting due to the development of microscopic cracks. Following this, the rail infrastructure company Railtrack imposed over 1,200 emergency speed restrictions across its network and instigated an extremely costly nationwide track replacement programme. The consequent severe operational disruption to the national network and the company's spiralling costs set in motion a series of events which resulted in the collapse of the company and its replacement with Network Rail, a state-owned,[20] "not-for-profit" company, with risks underwritten by the taxpayer. According to the European Railway Agency, in 2013 Britain had the safest railways in Europe based on the number of train safety incidents.[21]

At the end of September 2003, the first part of High Speed 1, a high-speed link to the Channel Tunnel and onward to France and Belgium, was completed, significantly adding to the rail infrastructure of the country. The rest of the link, from north Kent to London St Pancras opened in 2007. A major programme of remedial work on the West Coast Main Line started in 1997 and finished in 2008.[22]

Since the 2010s, many upgrades have been under way, such as Thameslink, Crossrail, the Northern Hub and electrification of the Great Western Main Line. Electrification plans for the Midland Main Line and the Transpennine line between Manchester and Leeds have been scaled back. Construction of High Speed 2 is underway, with a projected completion date of 2026 for Phase 1 (London to Birmingham) and 2033 for Phase 2. A poll of 1,500 adults in Britain in June 2018 showed that 64% support renationalising Britain's railways.[23]

Renationalisation edit

Currently, six franchises are under public ownership, and thus effectively nationalised. Four of them – LNER, Northern Trains, Southeastern, and TransPennine – are operators of last resort owned by the Department for Transport, whereas Transport for Wales Rail is owned by Transport for Wales, a Welsh-Government owned company, with no current plans to re-privatise the latter. On 1 April 2022, ScotRail was put under public ownership by the Scottish Government, under Transport Scotland as ScotRail Trains operating on the same day.

The COVID-19 pandemic caused a huge fall in the number of passengers using the railways, with journeys in 2020 being about 22% of the previous year, before rising again as travel restrictions eased.[24] During 2020, all train operating companies entered into emergency measures agreements with the UK and Scottish governments.[25] Normal franchise mechanisms were amended, transferring almost all revenue and cost risk to the government, effectively 'renationalising' the network temporarily.[26]

In September 2020, the UK Government permanently got rid of the rail franchising system.[27] On 20 May 2021, the Government announced a white paper that would transform the operation of the railways. The rail network will be partly renationalised, with infrastructure and operations brought together under the state-owned public body Great British Railways. Operations will be managed on a concessions model. According to the BBC, this represents the largest shake-up in the UK's railways since privatisation.[27] On 18 November 2021, the government announced the biggest ever public investment in Britain's rail network costing £96 billion and promising quicker and more frequent rail connections in the North and Midlands: the Integrated Rail Plan includes substantially improved connections North-South as well as East-West and includes three new high speed lines.[28]

Passenger services edit

 
An LNER Class 800 Azuma train on the East Coast Main Line in Northumberland
 
A GWR Class 800 Intercity Express Train on service from London Paddington station to Swansea

Passenger services in Great Britain were divided into regional franchises and run by mostly private (that is, non-state owned) train operating companies from 1995 to 2020. These companies bid for seven- to eight-year contracts to run individual franchises. Most contracts in England are awarded by the Department for Transport (DfT), with the exception of Merseyrail, where the franchise is awarded by the Merseyside Passenger Transport Executive. In Scotland, contracts for ScotRail, is awarded by Transport Scotland, and in Wales, contracts for Transport for Wales Rail, is awarded by Transport for Wales, although the latter is currently publicly-owned with no plans for franchising in the near future and ScotRail was brought into public ownership in 2022. Initially, there were 25 franchises, some franchises have since been combined, others nationalised. There are also a number of local or specialised rail services operated on an open access basis outside the franchise arrangements; examples include Heathrow Express and Hull Trains.

Many franchises were effectively abolished due to the financial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The UK government proposed a new state-owned public body, Great British Railways, which would operate a concession contract system on the network from 2023. As of November 2023, legislation to establish the new body was said to be "unlikely" within the 2023–2024 parliamentary session.[29]

In the 2015–16 operating year, franchised services provided 1,718 million journeys totalling (64.7 billion billion passenger km) of travel, an increase over 1994–5 of 117% in journeys (from 761 million) and just over doubling the passenger miles.[30] The passenger-miles figure, after being flat from 1965 to 1995, surpassed the 1947 figure for the first time in 1998 and continues to rise steeply.

The key index used to assess passenger train performance is the Public Performance Measure, which combines figures for punctuality and reliability. From a base of 90% of trains arriving on time in 1998, the measure dipped to 75% in mid-2001 due to stringent safety restrictions put in place after the Hatfield crash in October 2000. However, in June 2015 the PPM stood at 91.2% after a period of steady increases in the annual moving average since 2003 until around 2012 when the improvements levelled off.[31]

 
Two TransPennine Express Class 802 Nova 1 units passing through North Yorkshiresaid

Train fares cost 2.7% more than under British Rail in real terms on average.[17] For some years, Britain has been said to have the highest rail fares in Europe, with peak-time and season tickets considerably higher than other countries, partly because rail subsidies in Europe are higher.[32][33] However, passengers are also able to obtain some of the cheapest fares in Europe if they book in advance or travel at off-peak times[32] or purchase 'day-return' tickets which cost little more than a single ticket.

UK rail operators point out rail fare increases have been at a substantially lower rate than petrol prices for private motoring.[7] The difference in price has also been blamed on the fact Britain has the most restrictive loading gauge (maximum width and height of trains that can fit through tunnels, bridges etc.) in the world which means any trains must be significantly narrower and less tall than those used elsewhere. This means British trains cannot be bought "off-the-shelf" and must be specially built to fit British standards.

Average rolling-stock age fell slightly from the third quarter of 2001–02 to 2017–18, from 20.7 years old to 19.6 years old, and recent large orders from Bombardier and its acquirer Alstom, CAF, Hitachi and Stadler brought down the average age to around 15 years by March 2021.[34][35]

Although passengers rarely have cause to refer to either document, all travel is subject to the National Rail Conditions of Carriage and all tickets are valid subject to the rules set out in a number of so-called technical manuals, which are centrally produced for the network.

 
An EMR InterCity Class 222 Meridian at Leicester station

Annual journey numbers edit

Below are the estimated total number of journeys using heavy rail transport in Britain for each financial year. (This table does not include Eurostar, Underground or light rail services)

Annual journey numbers[1]
Year Journeys[nb 1] Journeys
% change
2004–2005 1,044,566,371
2005–2006 1,081,747,031  3.59
2006–2007 1,150,271,272  6.77
2007–2008 1,223,235,485  6.36
2008–2009 1,271,934,558  3.10
2009–2010 1,264,168,068  7.62
2010–2011 1,350,664,449  6.84
2011–2012 1,456,276,046  7.82
2012–2013 1,497,670,627  2.84
2013–2014 1,583,380,750  5.72
2014–2015 1,650,407,344  4.23
2015–2016 1,713,518,682  3.82
2016–2017 1,727,475,717  0.81
2017–2018 1,703,998,197  1.36
2018–2019 1,752,982,619  2.87
2019–2020 1,738,739,779  0.81
2020–2021 387,885,468  77.69
2021–2022 990,050,962  155.24

The following table is according to the Office of Rail and Road and includes open access operators such as Grand Central and Hull Trains.

Annual passenger numbers (millions)[36]
Year Long distance London and
South East
Regional Non-franchised
operators
Total Total % change
2002–2003 77.2 679.1 219.2 0 975.5
2003–2004 81.5 690.0 240.2 1,011.7  3.71
2004–2005 83.7 704.5 251.3 1,039.5  2.75
2005–2006 89.5 719.7 267.3 1,076.5  3.56
2006–2007 99.0 769.5 276.5 1,145.0  6.36
2007–2008 103.9 828.4 285.8 1,218.1  6.38
2008–2009 109.4 854.3 302.8 1,266.5  3.97
2009–2010 111.6 842.2 304.0 1.4 1,259.3  0.68
2010–2011 117.9 917.6 318.2 1.8 1,3555.6  7.65
2011–2012 125.3 993.8 340.9 1.5 1,461.5  7.82
2012–2013 127.7 1,032.4 340.9 1.7 1,502.6  2.81
2013–2014 129.0 1,106.9 350.5 1.9 1,588.3  5.70
2014–2015 134.2 1,154.9 364.7 2.1 1,655.8  4.25
2015–2016 138.3 1,202.8 374.2 2.3 1,717.6[37]  3.72
2016–2017 143.5 1,196.8 388.7 2.4 1,731.5  0.80
2017–2018 144.8 1,171.2 389.6 2.4 1,707.9  1.40
2018–2019 146.7 1,216.9 392.8 2.5 1,759.9  3.0
  1. ^ Passenger numbers plus interchanges

Stations edit

 
London Waterloo station is the busiest railway station in the UK. It is also the country's largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms.

There are 2,579 passenger railway stations on the Network Rail network.[5][6] This does not include the London Underground, nor other systems which are not part of the national network, such as heritage railways. Most date from the Victorian era and a number are in or on the edge of town and city centres. Major stations lie for the most part in large cities, with the largest conurbations (e.g. Liverpool, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow and Manchester) typically having more than one main station. London is a major hub of the network, with 12 main-line termini forming a "ring" around central London. Birmingham, Leeds, Manchester, Glasgow, Bristol and Reading are major interchanges for many cross-country journeys that do not involve London. However, some important railway junction stations lie in smaller cities and towns, for example York, Crewe and Ely. Some other places expanded into towns and cities because of the railway network. Swindon, for example, was little more than a village before the Great Western Railway chose to site its locomotive works there. In many instances geography, politics or military considerations originally caused stations to be sited further from the towns they served until, with time, these issues could be overcome (for example, Portsmouth had its original station at Gosport).

Inter-city edit

 
Overview map of the north–south main lines in Great Britain
 
A Southeastern Class 395 Javelin at St Pancras railway station

High-speed inter-city rail (above 124 mph or 200 km/h) was first introduced in Great Britain in the 1970s by British Rail. BR had pursued two development projects in parallel, the development of a tilting train technology, the Advanced Passenger Train (APT), and development of a conventional high-speed diesel train, the High Speed Train (HST). The APT project was abandoned, but the HST design entered service as the British Rail Classes 253, 254 and 255 trains. The prototype HST, the Class 252, reached a world speed record for diesel trains of 143.2 mph, while the main fleet entered service limited to a service speed of 125 mph, and were introduced progressively on main lines across the country, with a rebranding of their services as the InterCity 125. With electrification of the East Coast Main Line, high-speed rail in Great Britain was augmented with the introduction of the Class 91, intended for passenger service at up to 140 mph (225 km/h), and thus branded as the InterCity 225. The Class 91 units were designed for a maximum service speed of 140 mph, and running at this speed was trialled with a 'flashing green' signal aspect under the British signalling system. The trains were eventually limited to the same speed as the HST, to 125 mph, with higher speeds deemed to require cab signalling, which as of 2010 was not in place on the normal British railway network (but was used on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link). A final attempt by the nationalised British Rail at High Speed Rail was the cancelled InterCity 250 project in the 1990s for the West Coast Main Line.

Post privatisation, a plan to upgrade the West Coast Main Line to speeds of up to 140 mph with infrastructure improvements were finally abandoned, although the tilting train Class 390 Pendolino fleet designed for this maximum speed of service were still built and entered service in 2002, and operates limited to 125 mph. Other routes in the UK were upgraded with trains capable of top speeds of up to 125 mph running with the introduction between 2000 and 2005 of Class 180 Adelante DMUs and the Bombardier Voyager DEMUs (Classes 220, 221 and 222).

High Speed 1 edit

The first implementation of high-speed rail up to 186 mph in regular passenger service in Great Britain was the Channel Tunnel Rail Link (now known as High Speed 1), when its first phase opened in 2003 linking the British end of the Channel Tunnel at Folkestone with Fawkham Junction in Kent. This is used by international only passenger trains for the Eurostar service, using Class 373 and Class 374 trains. The line was later extended all the way into London St Pancras in 2007.

After the building of the first of a new Class 395 train fleet for use partly on High Speed 1 and parts of the rest of the UK rail network, the first domestic high-speed running over 125 mph (to about 140 mph) began in December 2009, including a special Olympic Javelin shuttle for the 2012 Summer Olympics. These services are operated by the South Eastern franchise.

Intercity Express Programme edit

For replacement of the domestic fleet of InterCity 125 and 225 trains on the existing national network, the Intercity Express Programme was announced. In 2009 it was announced the preferred rolling stock option for this project was the Hitachi Super Express family of multiple units, and they entered service in 2017 on the Great Western Main Line and 2019 on the East Coast Main Line. The trains will be capable of a maximum speed of 140 mph with "minor modifications", with the necessary signalling modifications required of the Network Rail infrastructure in Britain likely to come from the phased rollout of the Europe-wide European Rail Traffic Management System (ERTMS).

Proposed and partly under construction edit

High Speed 2 edit

Following several studies and consultations on high-speed rail, in 2009 the UK Government formally announced the High Speed 2 project, establishing a company to produce a feasibility study to examine route options and financing for a new high-speed railway in the UK. This study began on the assumption the route would be a new purpose-built high-speed line connected to High-Speed 1 to the Channel tunnel and from London to the West Midlands, via Heathrow Airport, relieving traffic on the West Coast Main Line (WCML). Conventional high-speed rail technology would be used as opposed to Maglev. The rolling stock would be capable of travelling on the existing Network Rail infrastructure if required, with the route intersecting with the existing WCML and the East Coast Main Line (ECML). A cancelled second phase of the project was planned to reach further north to Manchester, Sheffield and Leeds, as well as linking into the Midland Main Line.

Northern Powerhouse Rail edit

In June 2014, the chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, proposed a high-speed rail link Northern Powerhouse Rail (also known as High Speed 3 or High Speed North) between Liverpool and Newcastle/Sheffield/Hull. The line would use the existing route between Liverpool and Newcastle/Hull and a new route from to Sheffield will follow the same route to Manchester Victoria and then a new line from Victoria to Sheffield, with additional tunnels and other infrastructure.

High-speed rolling stock edit

As of August 2023 the following rolling stock on the UK network is capable of 125 mph or more:

Maximum speeds (mph (km/h))
Family TOPS classification Operator and name Type Max. recorded speed Max. design speed Max. speed in service
Siemens Velaro 374 Eurostar e320 EMU 219 (352) 200 (320) 186 (300)
TGV TMST 373 Eurostar e300 EMU 209 (334.7) 186 (300) 186 (300)
Hitachi A-train AT300 395 Southeastern Javelin EMU 157 (252)[38] 140 (225) 140 (225)
800 GWR IET, LNER Azuma BMU Not known 140 (225) 125 (200)
801 LNER Azuma EMU 140 (225) 125 (200)
802 GWR IET, TransPennine Express Nova 1, Hull Trains Paragon BMU 140 (225) 125 (200)
803 Lumo (unnamed) EMU 140 (225) 125 (200)
805 Avanti West Coast (TBC) BMU 140 (225) 125 (200)
807 Avanti West Coast (TBC) EMU 140 (225) 125 (200)
810 EMR InterCity Aurora BMU 140 (225) 125 (200)
InterCity 225 91 + Mark 4 coaches LNER InterCity 225 Electric Loco 162 (261) 140 (225) 125 (200)
Alstom Pendolino 390 Avanti West Coast Pendolino EMU 162 (261)[39] 140 (225) 125 (200)
CAF Civity 397 TransPennine Express Nova 2 EMU 125 (200) 125 (200)
InterCity 125 43 (HST) + Mark 3 coaches ScotRail Inter7City Diesel Loco 148 (~240) 125 (200) 125 (200)
Class 67 67 Diesel Loco 143 (230)[40] 125 (200) 125 (200)
Alstom Coradia 180 Grand Central Adelante DHMU 125 (200) 125 (200) 125 (200)
Bombardier Voyager 220 CrossCountry Voyager DEMU 125 (200) 125 (200) 125 (200)
Bombardier Voyager 221 Avanti West Coast Super Voyager

CrossCountry Voyager

DEMU 125 (200) 125 (200) 125 (200)
Bombardier Voyager 222 EMR InterCity Meridian DEMU 125 (200) 125 (200) 125 (200)

In 2011 the fastest timetabled start-to-stop run by a UK domestic train service was the Hull Trains 07.30 King's Cross to Hull, which covered the 125.4 km (78 miles) from Stevenage to Grantham in 42 minutes at an average speed of 179.1 km/h (111.4 mph). This was operated by a Class 180 diesel unit running "under the wires" at the time, and is now operated by Class 802 Paragon bi-mode units, operating on electric power on this section. This was matched by several Leeds to London Class 91-operated East Coast trains if their two-minute recovery allowance for this section is excluded from the public timetable.[41]

Local metro and other rail systems edit

 
A London Underground S-stock train

A number of towns and cities have rapid transit networks. Underground technology is used in the Glasgow subway, Merseyrail centred on Liverpool, London Underground centred on London, London Overground and the London Docklands Light Railway centred on London, and the Tyne and Wear Metro centred on Newcastle upon Tyne.

Light rail systems in the form of trams are in Birmingham, Croydon, Manchester, Nottingham, Sheffield and Edinburgh. These systems use a combination of street running tramways and, where available, reserved right of way or former conventional rail lines in some suburbs. Blackpool has the one remaining traditional tram system. Monorails, heritage tramways, miniature railways and funiculars also exist in several places. In addition, there are a number of heritage (mainly steam) standard and narrow gauge railways, and a few industrial railways and tramways. Some lines which appear to be heritage operations sometimes claim to be part of the public transport network; the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway in Kent regularly transports schoolchildren.

Most major cities have some form of commuter rail network. These include Belfast, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Liverpool, London and Manchester.

Goods services edit

 
Million tonnes of rail freight moved in the UK from 1983 to 2021 (annual rolling average). There was a large decrease in coal carried in 1984–5 due to the miners' strike.[42]
 
Billion tonne-kilometres of rail freight moved in the UK from 1983 to 2019[43]

There are four main goods operating companies in the UK, the largest of which is DB Cargo UK (formerly DB Schenker, formerly English Welsh & Scottish (EWS)). There are also several smaller independent operators including Mendip Rail. Types of freight carried include intermodal – in essence containerised freight – and coal, metals, oil, and construction materials. The Beeching Cuts, in contrast to passenger services, greatly modernised the goods sector, replacing inefficient wagons with containerised regional hubs.[44] Freight services had been in steady decline since the 1930s, initially because of the reduction in manufacturing and then road haulage's cost advantage in combination with higher wages.[45][46] Since 1995, however, the amount of freight carried on the railways has increased sharply due to increased reliability and competition, as well as international services.[45][47] In 2000, the Department for Transport's Transport Ten Year Plan called for an 80% increase in rail freight.[48]

Statistics on freight are specified in terms of the weight of freight lifted, and the net tonne kilometre, being freight weight multiplied by distance carried. 116.6 million tonnes of freight was lifted in the 2013–4 period, against 138 million tonnes in 1986–7, a decrease of 16%.[49] However, a record 22.7 billion net tonne kilometres (14 billion net ton miles) of freight movement were recorded in 2013–4, against 16.6 billion (10.1 billion) in 1986–7, an increase of 38%.[49] Coal made up 36% of the total net tonne kilometre, though its share was declining.[50] Rail freight had increased its market share since privatisation (by net tonne kilometres) from 7.4% in 1998 to 11.1% in 2013.[51] Growth was partly due to more international services including the Channel Tunnel and Port of Felixstowe, which is containerised.[52] Nevertheless, as of 2008, network bottlenecks and insufficient investment in catering for 9' 6" high shipping containers restricted growth.[47]

A symbolic loss to the rail freight industry in Great Britain was the custom of the Royal Mail, which from 2004 discontinued use of its 49-train fleet, and switched to road haulage after a near 170-year-preference for trains. Mail trains had long been part of the tradition of the railways in Great Britain, famously celebrated in the film Night Mail, for which W. H. Auden wrote the poem of the same name. Although Royal Mail suspended mail trains in January 2004, this decision was reversed in December of the same year, and Class 325s are now used on some routes including between London, Warrington and Scotland.[citation needed]

Train leasing services edit

At the time of privatisation, the rolling stock of British Rail was sold to the new operators, as in the case of the freight companies, or to the three ROSCOs (rolling stock companies) which lease or hire stock to passenger and freight train operators. Leasing is relatively commonplace in transport since it enables operating companies to avoid the complication associated with raising sufficient capital to purchase assets; instead, assets are leased and paid for from ongoing revenue. Since 1994 there has been a growth in smaller spot-hire companies that provide rolling stock on short-term contracts. Many of these have grown thanks to the selling-off of locomotives by the large freight operators, especially EWS.

Unlike other major players in the privatised railway system of Great Britain, the ROSCOs are not subject to close regulation by the economic regulatory authority. They were expected to compete with one another, and they do, although not in all respects.

Competition codes of practice edit

Since privatisation in 1995, the ROSCOs have faced criticism from several quarters – including passenger train operating companies such as GNER, Arriva and FirstGroup – on the basis they are acting as an oligopoly to keep lease prices higher than they would be in a competitive market. In 1998, Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott asked rail regulator John Swift to investigate the market's operation and make recommendations. Many believed Prescott favoured much closer regulation of the ROSCOs, perhaps bringing them into the net of contract-specific regulation, i.e., requiring every rolling stock lease to be approved by the Rail Regulator before it could be valid. Swift's report did not find major problems with the operation of what was then an infant market, and instead recommended the ROSCOs sign up to voluntary, non-binding codes of practice in relation to their future behaviour. Prescott did not like this, but he did not have the legislative time allocation to do much about it. Swift's successor as Rail Regulator, Tom Winsor, agreed with Swift and the ROSCOs were happy to go along with codes of practice, coupled with the Rail Regulator's new powers to deal with abuse of dominance and anti-competitive behaviour under the Competition Act 1998. In establishing these codes, the Rail Regulator made it clear he expected the ROSCOs to adhere to their letter and spirit. The codes of practice were duly put in place and for the next five years the Rail Regulator received no complaints about ROSCO behaviour.

White paper 2004 edit

 
An Avanti West Coast Class 390 Pendolino train at Stafford station

In July 2004, the DFT's White Paper on the future of the railways expressed dissatisfaction with the operation of the rolling stock leasing market, and the belief there may have been excessive pricing on the part of the ROSCOs.

In June 2006, Gwyneth Dunwoody, chair of the Transport Select Committee of the House of Commons, called for an investigation into the companies.[53] Transport commentator Christian Wolmar has asserted the high cost of leasing is due to the way the franchises are distributed to the train operating companies. While the TOCs are negotiating for a franchise they have some freedom to propose different rolling stock options. It is only once they have won the franchise, however, they start negotiating with the ROSCOs. The ROSCO will know the TOC's requirements and also knows the TOC has to obtain a fixed mix of rolling stock which puts the train operating company at a disadvantage in its negotiations with the ROSCO.[54]

Competition Commission edit

On 29 November 2006, following a June 2006 complaint by the DfT alleging excessive pricing by the ROSCOs, the Office of Rail Regulation (as it was then called) announced it was minded to refer the operation of the market for passenger rolling stock to the Competition Commission, citing, amongst other factors, problems in the DfT's own franchising policy as responsible for what may be regarded as a dysfunctional market. ORR said it will consult the industry and the public on what to do, and will publish its decision in April 2007. If the ORR does refer the market to the Competition Commission, there may well be a hiatus in investment in new rolling stock whilst the ROSCOs and their parent companies wait to hear what return they will be allowed to make on their train fleets. This could have the unintended consequence of intensifying the problem of overcrowding on some routes because TOCs will be unable to lengthen their trains or acquire new ones if they need the ROSCOs to co-operate in their acquisition or financing. Some commentators have suggested that such an outcome would be detrimental to the public interest. This is especially striking since the National Audit Office, in its November 2006 report on the renewal and upgrade of the West Coast Main Line, said that the capacity of the trains and the network will be full in the next few years and advocated train lengthening as an important measure to cope with sharply higher passenger numbers.

The Competition Commission conducted an investigation and published provisional findings[55] on 7 August 2008. The report was published on 7 April 2009.[56] A press release[57] summarised the recommendations as follows:

  • introduce longer franchise terms (in the region of 12 to 15 years or longer), which would allow TOCs to realise the benefits and recover the costs of switching to alternative new or used rolling stock over a longer period, which should increase the incentives and ability for TOCs to exercise choice
  • assess the benefits of alternative new or used rolling stock proposals beyond the franchise term and across other franchises when evaluating franchise bids. This will encourage a wider choice of rolling stock to be considered in franchise proposals, irrespective of franchise length
  • ensure franchise invitations to tender (ITTs) are specified in such a way franchise bidders are allowed a choice of rolling stock
  • requiring the ROSCOs to remove non-discrimination requirements from the Codes of Practice, which would provide greater incentives for the TOCs to seek improved terms from the ROSCOs
  • requiring rolling stock lessors to provide TOCs with a set list of information when making a lease rental offer for used rolling stock, which would give TOCs the ability to negotiate more effectively

Leasing companies (ROSCO) edit

See also Rolling stock company

Three companies took over British Rail's rolling stock on privatisation:

A number of other companies have since entered the leasing market:

Spot-hire companies edit

Spot-hire companies provide short-term leasing of rolling stock.

  • MiddlePeak Railways, a locomotive hire & lease company with a stock of locomotives similar to Class 08 & NS 0-6-0 600 Class shunting locomotives, other locomotives, rolling stock & parts.[63][64]
  • GL Railease owned by GATX Capital, and Lombard, a subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Scotland.
  • Harry Needle Railroad Company, an industrial and main line locomotive hire and overhaul company. Operates Class 08 shunting locomotives, and Class 20 locomotives.[65]
  • Riviera Trains, a spot-hire company with a fleet of Class 47 locomotives. This company works closely with DB Cargo UK.[66]
  • West Coast Railways, a spot-hire and railtour-operator with a stock of Class 37 and Class 47 locomotives, as well as the rebuilt Class 57 locomotive.
  • Eastern Rail Services, a rolling stock spot hire company, providing leasing and hire, acquisition, parts supply and overhaul and technical advice.

Statutory framework edit

Railways in Great Britain are in the private sector, but they are subject to control by central government, and to economic and safety regulation by arms of government.

In 2006, using powers in the Railways Act 2005, the DfT took over most of the functions of the now wound up Strategic Rail Authority. The DfT now itself runs competitions for the award of passenger rail franchises, and, once awarded, monitors and enforces the contracts with the private sector franchisees. Franchises specify the passenger rail services which are to be run and the quality and other conditions (for example, the cleanliness of trains, station facilities and opening hours, the punctuality and reliability of trains) which the operators have to meet. Some franchises receive a subsidy from the DfT for doing so, and some are cash-positive, which means the franchisee pays the DfT for the contract. Some franchises start life as subsidised and, over their life, move to being cash-positive.

The other regulatory authority for the privatised railway is the Office of Rail and Road (previously the Office of Rail Regulation), which, following the Railways Act 2005, is the combined economic and safety regulator. It replaced the Rail Regulator on 5 July 2004. The Rail Safety and Standards Board still exists, however; established in 2003 on the recommendations of a public inquiry, it leads the industry's progress in health and safety matters.

The principal modern railway statutes are:

Industry bodies edit

Statutory authorities edit

Devolved authorities edit

Network and signalling operations edit

Other national entities edit

Trade unions edit

The railways are one of the most heavily unionised industrial sectors in the UK.

Regional entities edit

See Passenger transport executive

See List of companies operating trains in the United Kingdom.

Freight companies edit

Open access and other non-franchised passenger operators edit

1820s–1840s: Early companies edit

This is only the earliest of the main line openings: for a more comprehensive list of the hundreds of early railways see List of early British railway companies

Heritage and private edit

 
Heritage railways are popular tourist attractions. The photo shows a preserved locomotive (BR Standard 7MT 70013 Oliver Cromwell) on the North Norfolk Railway on 11 March 2010.

Many lines closed by British Railways, including many closed during the Beeching cuts, have been restored and reopened as heritage railways. A few have been relaid as narrow-gauge but the majority are standard-gauge. Most use both steam and diesel locomotives for haulage. Most heritage railways are operated as tourist attractions and do not provide regular year-round train services.

Proposed line re-openings edit

Several pressure groups are campaigning for the re-opening of closed railway lines in Great Britain. These include:

From 1995 until 2009, 27 new lines (totalling 199 track miles) and 68 stations were opened, with 65 further new station sites identified by Network Rail or government for possible construction.[74] On 15 June 2009 the Association of Train Operating Companies (ATOC) published the report Connecting Communities: Expanding Access to the Rail Network, detailing schemes around England where it believed there was a commercial business case for passenger network expansion. The published proposals involved the re-opening or new construction of 40 stations, serving communities with populations of over 15,000, including 14 schemes involving the re-opening or reconstruction of rail lines for passenger services. These would be short-lead-time local projects, to be completed in timescales ranging from 2 years 9 months to 6 years, once approved by local and regional governments, Network Rail and the Department for Transport, complementing existing long-term national projects.[75][76]

Most populous towns without rail services edit

This is a list of towns in England that do not have any sort of rail service. Services taken into account include National Rail, tram and metro services such as the Manchester Metrolink or the Tyne and Wear Metro. The first list is of separate towns. The second is of towns that form part of larger conurbations.

Built-up areas edit

Town Population (2019 estimate)[77] Railway station closed Notes
Rushden 41,387 1969[78] Proposals have been put forward for Rushden Parkway railway station on the Midland Main Line, to the west of the town.
Coalville 41,223 1964[79] Proposed for reopening on the Leicester–Burton upon Trent line.[80]
Abingdon-on-Thames 40,074 1963[81] Radley railway station lies less than a mile outside the town's boundaries.
Canvey 38,849 N/A Benfleet is sited nearby on the mainland.
Blyth 39,535 1964[82] The Northumberland Line project is reopening a railway passenger service to Newsham (on the edge of Blyth) by 2024.
Wisbech 35,681 1968[83] A 2009 report stated that it was feasible to reopen the Bramley Line to March railway station for £12 million, as the line was extant but unused. Since then, little had been done and the cost had risen to an estimated £70 million by 2019.[84]
Bideford 30,783 1965
Witney 30,518 1962[83]
Norton Radstock 30,319 1966
Consett 30,023 1967[85]
Clay Cross/North Wingfield 29,975 1967
Burntwood 29,525 1965 The town is served by the Chasewater Railway which is a heritage railway.
Ashington 28,139 1964[86] The Northumberland Line project is reopening a railway passenger service to Ashington by 2024.
Haverhill 27,481 1967[87]
Portishead 26,535 1964 As of 2020, there are plans afoot to reopen Portishead station.
Daventry 25,781 1958 The nearest station at present is Long Buckby on the Northampton Loop. Proposals have been made to reopen Weedon railway station as a new Daventry Parkway station.[88][89][90][91] Both stations are about the same distance (about 4.5 mi (7.2 km)) from central Daventry.
Stubbington 25,239 N/A Lies within the Borough of Fareham and is 2 miles from Fareham railway station.
Stanley, County Durham 22,553 1955 The previous station was West Stanley railway station.
Maldon 22,032 1964[92]
Clevedon 21,138 1966
Bordon 20,789 1957
Dereham 21,362 1969 The town is served by a station on the Mid-Norfolk Railway, which is a heritage railway.
Stourport-on-Severn 21,096 1970[93]
Dinnington 20,443 1929 Previous station was Dinnington and Laughton railway station which is on a line still used for freight.
Hythe 20,402 1966 The previous station was on a line in use until 2016.

Built-up area subdivisions edit

Town Population (2011 census) Railway station closed Urban area Notes
Dudley 79,379[94] 1964[95] West Midlands Conurbation The town is served by Dudley Port station, just over a mile from the town centre but outside the borough boundary. Work began in January 2020 on a £449 million 6.8-mile (10.9 km) extension of the West Midlands Metro tram system from Wednesbury to Dudley, on the formation of the old South Staffordshire line.[96]
Gosport 71,529[97] 1953[98] South Hampshire While Gosport does not have a railway station, Portsmouth Harbour station is a short pedestrian ferry ride away.
Newcastle-under-Lyme 75,082[99] 1964[100] Stoke-on-Trent Built-up Area Newcastle-under-Lyme lies 45 minutes on foot from Stoke-on-Trent railway station.
Washington 67,085[101] 1964 Wearside The town previously had a station on what is now the mothballed Leamside line. It has been the subject of many reopening proposals,[102] including a potential extension of the Tyne and Wear Metro system.[103]
Waterlooville 64,350 N/A South Hampshire Lies within the Borough of Havant which has four stations.
Halesowen 58,135[104] 1958[105] West Midlands conurbation A 40-minute walk from Old Hill railway station.
Leigh 52,855 1969[106] Greater Manchester Built-up Area Lies on the Leigh-Salford-Manchester Bus Rapid Transit guided busway that links Leigh, Salford and Manchester City centre.
Swadlincote 45,000[107] 1947[108] Burton upon Trent Built-up area A reopening of the Leicester–Burton upon Trent line would see a station at Gresley, south of the town.[80]
Kingswood 40,734 N/A Bristol Built-up Area
Skelmersdale 38,813[109] 1963[110] Wigan Urban Area Skelmersdale was designated as a 'new town' in 1961, with a focus on people owning cars. However, a proposal was considered by the Lancashire County Council. [111] The Department for Transport announced in July 2022 that it was rejecting the Strategic Outline Business Case, throwing the scheme into doubt.[112]
Dunstable 30,184[113] 1965[114] Luton/Dunstable Urban Area Lies on a guided busway that links to the town to stations in Luton.
Willenhall 28,480[115][116] 1965[117] West Midlands Conurbation The railway station at Willenhall, which is on a freight/diversionary line between Wolverhampton and Walsall/Tame Bridge railway stations, will reopen to passengers in 2023.[118]
Aldridge 26,988[119][120] 1965[121] West Midlands Conurbation The station at Aldridge has been proposed for reopening by 2040. It is on a freight/diversionary line between Walsall and Water Orton railway stations.[122][123]
Ferndown 26,559[124] N/A South East Dorset Conurbation
Woodley 25,932[125] N/A Reading/Wokingham Urban Area Earley station is on the southern boundary of the parish, but separated from Woodley by the A3290 dual carriageway. Woodley is within the Borough of Wokingham, which has six stations including the aforementioned Earley.
Rawtenstall, Lancashire 23,128 [126] 1972 Accrington/Rossendale Built-up area The town has a station on the East Lancashire Railway served by a heritage railway.

Links with adjacent countries edit

Rail-ferry-rail services edit

See also edit

References edit

Citations edit

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Sources edit

External links edit

  • National Rail Official UK Rail timetable site
  • Rail transport in Great Britain at Curlie
  • National Rail maps page 21 June 2009 at the Wayback Machine UK railway maps
  • BritRail 22 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine ATOC site with timetables, maps and cross-network passes for foreign travellers in UK
  • Canadian source for British Rail Passes And tickets
  • ScotlandRailways 25 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine Scottish Rail site with timetables, maps and cross-network passes for foreign travellers in Scotland
  • Great Scenic Railways of Devon and Cornwall 7 June 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  • Collection of Google Earth locations of National Rail stations 13 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine (Requires Google Earth software) from the Google Earth Community forum

rail, transport, great, britain, rail, transport, whole, united, kingdom, rail, transport, united, kingdom, rail, transport, northern, ireland, rail, transport, ireland, railway, system, great, britain, oldest, railway, system, world, first, locomotive, hauled. For rail transport in the whole of the United Kingdom see Rail transport in the United Kingdom For rail transport in Northern Ireland see Rail transport in Ireland The railway system in Great Britain is the oldest railway system in the world The first locomotive hauled public railway opened in 1825 which was followed by an era of rapid expansion Most of the track is managed by Network Rail which in 2017 had a network of 9 824 miles 15 811 km of standard gauge lines of which 3 339 miles 5 374 km were electrified 3 4 These lines range from single to quadruple track or more In addition some cities have separate metro light rail and tram systems including the extensive and historic London Underground There are also many private railways some of them narrow gauge which are primarily short lines for tourists The main rail network is connected with that of continental Europe by the Channel Tunnel and High Speed 1 originally the Channel Tunnel Rail Link which fully opened in 1994 and 2007 respectively Rail transport in Great BritainTrains at London Paddington one of Great Britain s busiest stationsOperationInfrastructure companyNetwork Rail until 2024 Major operatorsNational Rail franchisees Independent operators State owned operatorsStatisticsRidership1 738 billion 2019 20 1 Passenger km41 5 mi 66 8 km billion 2019 20 2 System lengthTotal9 824 mi 15 811 km 3 4 Electrified3 339 mi 5 374 km 3 4 FeaturesNo stations2 576 5 6 In 2019 there were 1 738 billion journeys on the National Rail network 1 making the British network the fifth most used in the world Great Britain ranks 23rd in world population Unlike a number of other countries rail travel in the United Kingdom has enjoyed a renaissance in recent years with passenger numbers approaching their highest ever level see usage figures below This has coincided with the privatisation of British Rail but the cause of this increase is unclear The growth is partly attributed to a shift away from private motoring due to growing road congestion and increasing petrol prices but also to the overall increase in travel due to affluence 7 Passenger journeys in Britain grew by 88 over the period 1997 98 to 2014 as compared to 62 in Germany 41 in France and 16 in Spain 8 The United Kingdom is a member of the International Union of Railways UIC The UIC country code for United Kingdom is 70 The UK has the 17th largest railway network in the world despite many lines having closed in the 20th century due to the Beeching cuts it remains one of the densest networks It is one of the busiest railways in Europe with 20 more train services than France 60 more than Italy and more than Spain Switzerland the Netherlands Portugal and Norway combined as well as representing more than 20 of all passenger journeys in Europe 9 The rail industry employs 115 000 people and supports another 250 000 through its supply chain 10 After the initial period of rapid expansion following the first public railways in the early 19th century from about 1900 onwards the network suffered from gradual attrition and more severe rationalisation in the 1950s and 1960s However the network has again been growing since the 1980s The UK was ranked eighth among national European rail systems in the 2017 European Railway Performance Index for intensity of use quality of service and safety performance 11 To cope with increasing passenger numbers there is a large programme of upgrades to the network including Thameslink Crossrail electrification of lines in cab signalling new inter city trains and new high speed lines Contents 1 Historical overview 1 1 Nationalisation 1 2 Reorganisation and privatisation 1 3 Renationalisation 2 Passenger services 2 1 Annual journey numbers 2 2 Stations 2 3 Inter city 2 3 1 High Speed 1 2 3 2 Intercity Express Programme 2 3 3 Proposed and partly under construction 2 3 3 1 High Speed 2 2 3 3 2 Northern Powerhouse Rail 2 3 4 High speed rolling stock 2 4 Local metro and other rail systems 3 Goods services 4 Train leasing services 4 1 Competition codes of practice 4 2 White paper 2004 4 3 Competition Commission 4 4 Leasing companies ROSCO 4 5 Spot hire companies 5 Statutory framework 6 Industry bodies 6 1 Statutory authorities 6 1 1 Devolved authorities 6 2 Network and signalling operations 6 3 Other national entities 6 3 1 Trade unions 6 4 Regional entities 6 5 Freight companies 6 6 Open access and other non franchised passenger operators 7 1820s 1840s Early companies 8 Heritage and private 9 Proposed line re openings 9 1 Most populous towns without rail services 9 1 1 Built up areas 9 1 2 Built up area subdivisions 10 Links with adjacent countries 10 1 Rail ferry rail services 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Citations 12 2 Sources 13 External linksHistorical overview edit nbsp Current railway lines in Ireland the United Kingdom and the Isle of Man are shown in black metro lines in red and former routes in green nbsp Rail passengers in Great Britain from 1829 to 2023 showing the early era of small railway companies the amalgamation into the Big Four nationalisation and finally the current era of privatisationMain article History of rail transport in Great Britain According to historians David Brandon and Alan Brooke the railways brought into being our modern world They stimulated demand for building materials coal iron and later steel Excelling in the bulk movement of coal they provided the fuel for the furnaces of industry and for domestic fireplaces Millions of people were able to travel who had scarcely ever travelled before Railways enabled mail newspapers periodicals and cheap literature to be distributed easily quickly and cheaply allowing a much wider and faster dissemination of ideas and information They had a significant impact on improving diet and enabled a proportionately smaller agricultural industry was able to feed a much larger urban population They employed huge quantities of labour both directly and indirectly They helped Britain to become the Workshop of the World by reducing transport costs not only of raw materials but of finished goods large amounts of which were exported T oday s global corporations originated with the great limited liability railway companies By the third quarter of the nineteenth century there was scarcely any person living in Britain whose life had not been altered in some way by the coming of the railways Railways contributed to the transformation of Britain from a rural to a predominantly urban society 12 The railways started with the local isolated wooden wagonways in 1560s using horses These wagonways then spread particularly in mining areas The system was later built as a patchwork of local lines operated by small private railway companies Over the course of the 19th and early 20th centuries these amalgamated or were bought by competitors until only a handful of larger companies remained see Railway Mania The entire network was brought under government control during the First World War and a number of advantages of amalgamation and planning were revealed However the government resisted calls for the nationalisation of the network first proposed by 19th century Prime Minister William Gladstone as early as the 1830s Instead from 1 January 1923 almost all the remaining companies were grouped into the big four the Great Western Railway the London and North Eastern Railway the London Midland and Scottish Railway and the Southern Railway companies there were also a number of other joint railways such as the Midland and Great Northern Joint Railway and the Cheshire Lines Committee as well as special joint railways such as the Forth Bridge Railway Ryde Pier Railway and at one time the East London Railway The Big Four were joint stock public companies and they continued to run the railway system until 31 December 1947 The growth in road transport during the 1920s and 1930s greatly reduced revenue for the rail companies Rail companies accused the government of favouring road haulage through the subsidised construction of roads The railways entered a slow decline owing to a lack of investment and changes in transport policy and lifestyles During World War II the companies managements joined together effectively forming one company A maintenance backlog developed during the war and the private sector only had two years to deal with this after the war ended After 1945 for both practical and ideological reasons the government decided to bring the rail service into the public sector Nationalisation edit Main article History of rail transport in Great Britain 1948 1994 From the start of 1948 the big four were nationalised to form British Railways latterly British Rail under the control of the British Transport Commission Although BR was a single entity it was divided into six later five regional authorities in accordance with the existing areas of operation Though there were few initial changes to the service usage increased and the network became profitable Regeneration of track and railway stations was completed by 1954 In the same year changes to the British Transport Commission including the privatisation of road haulage ended the coordination of transport in Great Britain Rail revenue fell and in 1955 the network again ceased to be profitable The mid 1950s saw the rapid introduction of diesel and electric rolling stock but the expected transfer back from road to rail did not occur and losses began to mount The desire for profitability led to a major reduction in the network during the mid 1960s with ICI manager Dr Richard Beeching commissioned by the government under Ernest Marples with reorganising the railways Many branch lines and a number of main lines were closed because they were deemed uneconomic the Beeching Axe of 1963 removing much feeder traffic from main line passenger services In the second Beeching report of 1965 only the major trunk routes were selected for large scale investment leading many to speculate the rest of the network would eventually be closed This was never implemented by BR Passenger services experienced a renaissance with the introduction of the InterCity 125 trains in the 1970s Passenger levels fluctuated since then increasing during periods of economic growth and falling during recessions The 1980s saw severe cuts in government funding and above inflation increases in fares 13 In the early 1990s the five geographical Regions were replaced by a Sectored organisation in which passenger services were organised into InterCity Network SouthEast and Regional Railways sectors Reorganisation and privatisation edit Main articles Privatisation of British Rail Impact of the privatisation of British Rail and History of rail transport in Great Britain 1995 to date The Railways Act 1993 14 divided the railways up with Railtrack taking ownership of British Rail s property portfolio tracks signals bridges and tunnels Rolling Stock Operating Companies and train operating companies Passenger transport services were bundled together into franchises to facilitate cross subsidy within franchises with many regulations on ticket prices and types regulated fare increases and Parliamentary service obligations Companies submit bids to the franchising authority often the Secretary of State for Transport Passenger Transport Authority or devolved government competing for the lowest subsidy requirement and to invest in the railway over the lifespan of the franchise There is also provision for subsidy between franchises with profitable franchises demanding payments made to the government to cover a share of the losses from others Examples of franchises include ScotRail Great Western and Southern Trains Open Access Operators are entirely free to set their own services and fares unaffected by government regulations Examples of such operators are Lumo and Grand Central Hull Trains and Heathrow Express In the case of the InterCity West Coast and InterCity East Coast franchises applicants submit bids to return the most money to the government from operating the service This has led to franchisees collapsing when passenger growth targets are not met as promised payments to the government cannot be paid and the franchise is exited early In 2023 Network Rail held over 59 1 billion in debt and 1 176 billion interest payments 15 Many of these debts were incurred by Railtrack and transferred to Network Rail when it collapsed British Rail operations were privatised during 1994 1997 Ownership of the track and infrastructure passed to Railtrack whilst passenger operations were franchised to individual private sector operators originally there were 25 franchises and the goods services sold outright six companies were set up but five of these were sold to the same buyer The government said privatisation would see an improvement in passenger services and satisfaction according to the National Rail Passenger survey has indeed gone up from 76 in 1999 when the survey started to 83 in 2013 and the number of passengers not satisfied with their journey dropped from 10 to 6 16 Since privatisation passenger levels have more than doubled and have surpassed their level in the late 1940s Train fares cost 2 7 more than under British Rail in real terms on average 17 However while the price of anytime and off peak tickets has increased the price of Advance tickets has dramatically decreased in real terms the average Advance ticket in 1995 cost 9 14 in 2014 prices compared to 5 17 in 2014 18 nbsp Rail fatalities per billion passenger km in European countries during 2013 Rail subsidies have increased from 2 9bn in 1992 93 to 3 8bn in 2015 16 in current prices although subsidy per journey has fallen from 3 85 per journey to 2 19 per journey 17 19 However this masks great regional variation as 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 19 The public image of rail travel was severely damaged by a series of significant accidents after privatisation These included the Hatfield accident caused by a rail fragmenting due to the development of microscopic cracks Following this the rail infrastructure company Railtrack imposed over 1 200 emergency speed restrictions across its network and instigated an extremely costly nationwide track replacement programme The consequent severe operational disruption to the national network and the company s spiralling costs set in motion a series of events which resulted in the collapse of the company and its replacement with Network Rail a state owned 20 not for profit company with risks underwritten by the taxpayer According to the European Railway Agency in 2013 Britain had the safest railways in Europe based on the number of train safety incidents 21 At the end of September 2003 the first part of High Speed 1 a high speed link to the Channel Tunnel and onward to France and Belgium was completed significantly adding to the rail infrastructure of the country The rest of the link from north Kent to London St Pancras opened in 2007 A major programme of remedial work on the West Coast Main Line started in 1997 and finished in 2008 22 Since the 2010s many upgrades have been under way such as Thameslink Crossrail the Northern Hub and electrification of the Great Western Main Line Electrification plans for the Midland Main Line and the Transpennine line between Manchester and Leeds have been scaled back Construction of High Speed 2 is underway with a projected completion date of 2026 for Phase 1 London to Birmingham and 2033 for Phase 2 A poll of 1 500 adults in Britain in June 2018 showed that 64 support renationalising Britain s railways 23 Renationalisation edit Main articles Great British Railways Transport for Wales Rail and ScotRail Trains See also Timeline of future rail network upgrades in Great Britain See also List of railway lines in Great Britain and Rail transport in Wales Currently six franchises are under public ownership and thus effectively nationalised Four of them LNER Northern Trains Southeastern and TransPennine are operators of last resort owned by the Department for Transport whereas Transport for Wales Rail is owned by Transport for Wales a Welsh Government owned company with no current plans to re privatise the latter On 1 April 2022 ScotRail was put under public ownership by the Scottish Government under Transport Scotland as ScotRail Trains operating on the same day The COVID 19 pandemic caused a huge fall in the number of passengers using the railways with journeys in 2020 being about 22 of the previous year before rising again as travel restrictions eased 24 During 2020 all train operating companies entered into emergency measures agreements with the UK and Scottish governments 25 Normal franchise mechanisms were amended transferring almost all revenue and cost risk to the government effectively renationalising the network temporarily 26 In September 2020 the UK Government permanently got rid of the rail franchising system 27 On 20 May 2021 the Government announced a white paper that would transform the operation of the railways The rail network will be partly renationalised with infrastructure and operations brought together under the state owned public body Great British Railways Operations will be managed on a concessions model According to the BBC this represents the largest shake up in the UK s railways since privatisation 27 On 18 November 2021 the government announced the biggest ever public investment in Britain s rail network costing 96 billion and promising quicker and more frequent rail connections in the North and Midlands the Integrated Rail Plan includes substantially improved connections North South as well as East West and includes three new high speed lines 28 Passenger services editSee also List of companies operating trains in the United Kingdom nbsp An LNER Class 800 Azuma train on the East Coast Main Line in Northumberland nbsp A GWR Class 800 Intercity Express Train on service from London Paddington station to SwanseaPassenger services in Great Britain were divided into regional franchises and run by mostly private that is non state owned train operating companies from 1995 to 2020 These companies bid for seven to eight year contracts to run individual franchises Most contracts in England are awarded by the Department for Transport DfT with the exception of Merseyrail where the franchise is awarded by the Merseyside Passenger Transport Executive In Scotland contracts for ScotRail is awarded by Transport Scotland and in Wales contracts for Transport for Wales Rail is awarded by Transport for Wales although the latter is currently publicly owned with no plans for franchising in the near future and ScotRail was brought into public ownership in 2022 Initially there were 25 franchises some franchises have since been combined others nationalised There are also a number of local or specialised rail services operated on an open access basis outside the franchise arrangements examples include Heathrow Express and Hull Trains Many franchises were effectively abolished due to the financial effects of the COVID 19 pandemic The UK government proposed a new state owned public body Great British Railways which would operate a concession contract system on the network from 2023 As of November 2023 update legislation to establish the new body was said to be unlikely within the 2023 2024 parliamentary session 29 In the 2015 16 operating year franchised services provided 1 718 million journeys totalling 64 7 billion billion passenger km of travel an increase over 1994 5 of 117 in journeys from 761 million and just over doubling the passenger miles 30 The passenger miles figure after being flat from 1965 to 1995 surpassed the 1947 figure for the first time in 1998 and continues to rise steeply The key index used to assess passenger train performance is the Public Performance Measure which combines figures for punctuality and reliability From a base of 90 of trains arriving on time in 1998 the measure dipped to 75 in mid 2001 due to stringent safety restrictions put in place after the Hatfield crash in October 2000 However in June 2015 the PPM stood at 91 2 after a period of steady increases in the annual moving average since 2003 until around 2012 when the improvements levelled off 31 nbsp Two TransPennine Express Class 802 Nova 1 units passing through North YorkshiresaidTrain fares cost 2 7 more than under British Rail in real terms on average 17 For some years Britain has been said to have the highest rail fares in Europe with peak time and season tickets considerably higher than other countries partly because rail subsidies in Europe are higher 32 33 However passengers are also able to obtain some of the cheapest fares in Europe if they book in advance or travel at off peak times 32 or purchase day return tickets which cost little more than a single ticket UK rail operators point out rail fare increases have been at a substantially lower rate than petrol prices for private motoring 7 The difference in price has also been blamed on the fact Britain has the most restrictive loading gauge maximum width and height of trains that can fit through tunnels bridges etc in the world which means any trains must be significantly narrower and less tall than those used elsewhere This means British trains cannot be bought off the shelf and must be specially built to fit British standards Average rolling stock age fell slightly from the third quarter of 2001 02 to 2017 18 from 20 7 years old to 19 6 years old and recent large orders from Bombardier and its acquirer Alstom CAF Hitachi and Stadler brought down the average age to around 15 years by March 2021 34 35 Although passengers rarely have cause to refer to either document all travel is subject to the National Rail Conditions of Carriage and all tickets are valid subject to the rules set out in a number of so called technical manuals which are centrally produced for the network nbsp An EMR InterCity Class 222 Meridian at Leicester stationAnnual journey numbers edit Below are the estimated total number of journeys using heavy rail transport in Britain for each financial year This table does not include Eurostar Underground or light rail services Annual journey numbers 1 Year Journeys nb 1 Journeys change2004 2005 1 044 566 3712005 2006 1 081 747 031 nbsp 3 592006 2007 1 150 271 272 nbsp 6 772007 2008 1 223 235 485 nbsp 6 362008 2009 1 271 934 558 nbsp 3 102009 2010 1 264 168 068 nbsp 7 622010 2011 1 350 664 449 nbsp 6 842011 2012 1 456 276 046 nbsp 7 822012 2013 1 497 670 627 nbsp 2 842013 2014 1 583 380 750 nbsp 5 722014 2015 1 650 407 344 nbsp 4 232015 2016 1 713 518 682 nbsp 3 822016 2017 1 727 475 717 nbsp 0 812017 2018 1 703 998 197 nbsp 1 362018 2019 1 752 982 619 nbsp 2 872019 2020 1 738 739 779 nbsp 0 812020 2021 387 885 468 nbsp 77 692021 2022 990 050 962 nbsp 155 24The following table is according to the Office of Rail and Road and includes open access operators such as Grand Central and Hull Trains Annual passenger numbers millions 36 Year Long distance London andSouth East Regional Non franchisedoperators Total Total change2002 2003 77 2 679 1 219 2 0 975 52003 2004 81 5 690 0 240 2 1 011 7 nbsp 3 712004 2005 83 7 704 5 251 3 1 039 5 nbsp 2 752005 2006 89 5 719 7 267 3 1 076 5 nbsp 3 562006 2007 99 0 769 5 276 5 1 145 0 nbsp 6 362007 2008 103 9 828 4 285 8 1 218 1 nbsp 6 382008 2009 109 4 854 3 302 8 1 266 5 nbsp 3 972009 2010 111 6 842 2 304 0 1 4 1 259 3 nbsp 0 682010 2011 117 9 917 6 318 2 1 8 1 3555 6 nbsp 7 652011 2012 125 3 993 8 340 9 1 5 1 461 5 nbsp 7 822012 2013 127 7 1 032 4 340 9 1 7 1 502 6 nbsp 2 812013 2014 129 0 1 106 9 350 5 1 9 1 588 3 nbsp 5 702014 2015 134 2 1 154 9 364 7 2 1 1 655 8 nbsp 4 252015 2016 138 3 1 202 8 374 2 2 3 1 717 6 37 nbsp 3 722016 2017 143 5 1 196 8 388 7 2 4 1 731 5 nbsp 0 802017 2018 144 8 1 171 2 389 6 2 4 1 707 9 nbsp 1 402018 2019 146 7 1 216 9 392 8 2 5 1 759 9 nbsp 3 0 Passenger numbers plus interchanges Stations edit Further information Category Railway stations in the United Kingdom nbsp London Waterloo station is the busiest railway station in the UK It is also the country s largest station in terms of floor space and has the greatest number of platforms There are 2 579 passenger railway stations on the Network Rail network 5 6 This does not include the London Underground nor other systems which are not part of the national network such as heritage railways Most date from the Victorian era and a number are in or on the edge of town and city centres Major stations lie for the most part in large cities with the largest conurbations e g Liverpool Birmingham Bristol Cardiff Edinburgh Glasgow and Manchester typically having more than one main station London is a major hub of the network with 12 main line termini forming a ring around central London Birmingham Leeds Manchester Glasgow Bristol and Reading are major interchanges for many cross country journeys that do not involve London However some important railway junction stations lie in smaller cities and towns for example York Crewe and Ely Some other places expanded into towns and cities because of the railway network Swindon for example was little more than a village before the Great Western Railway chose to site its locomotive works there In many instances geography politics or military considerations originally caused stations to be sited further from the towns they served until with time these issues could be overcome for example Portsmouth had its original station at Gosport Inter city edit nbsp Overview map of the north south main lines in Great Britain nbsp A Southeastern Class 395 Javelin at St Pancras railway stationMain articles High speed rail in the United Kingdom and Inter city rail in the United Kingdom High speed inter city rail above 124 mph or 200 km h was first introduced in Great Britain in the 1970s by British Rail BR had pursued two development projects in parallel the development of a tilting train technology the Advanced Passenger Train APT and development of a conventional high speed diesel train the High Speed Train HST The APT project was abandoned but the HST design entered service as the British Rail Classes 253 254 and 255 trains The prototype HST the Class 252 reached a world speed record for diesel trains of 143 2 mph while the main fleet entered service limited to a service speed of 125 mph and were introduced progressively on main lines across the country with a rebranding of their services as the InterCity 125 With electrification of the East Coast Main Line high speed rail in Great Britain was augmented with the introduction of the Class 91 intended for passenger service at up to 140 mph 225 km h and thus branded as the InterCity 225 The Class 91 units were designed for a maximum service speed of 140 mph and running at this speed was trialled with a flashing green signal aspect under the British signalling system The trains were eventually limited to the same speed as the HST to 125 mph with higher speeds deemed to require cab signalling which as of 2010 was not in place on the normal British railway network but was used on the Channel Tunnel Rail Link A final attempt by the nationalised British Rail at High Speed Rail was the cancelled InterCity 250 project in the 1990s for the West Coast Main Line Post privatisation a plan to upgrade the West Coast Main Line to speeds of up to 140 mph with infrastructure improvements were finally abandoned although the tilting train Class 390 Pendolino fleet designed for this maximum speed of service were still built and entered service in 2002 and operates limited to 125 mph Other routes in the UK were upgraded with trains capable of top speeds of up to 125 mph running with the introduction between 2000 and 2005 of Class 180 Adelante DMUs and the Bombardier Voyager DEMUs Classes 220 221 and 222 High Speed 1 edit Main article HS1 The first implementation of high speed rail up to 186 mph in regular passenger service in Great Britain was the Channel Tunnel Rail Link now known as High Speed 1 when its first phase opened in 2003 linking the British end of the Channel Tunnel at Folkestone with Fawkham Junction in Kent This is used by international only passenger trains for the Eurostar service using Class 373 and Class 374 trains The line was later extended all the way into London St Pancras in 2007 After the building of the first of a new Class 395 train fleet for use partly on High Speed 1 and parts of the rest of the UK rail network the first domestic high speed running over 125 mph to about 140 mph began in December 2009 including a special Olympic Javelin shuttle for the 2012 Summer Olympics These services are operated by the South Eastern franchise Intercity Express Programme edit Main article Intercity Express Programme For replacement of the domestic fleet of InterCity 125 and 225 trains on the existing national network the Intercity Express Programme was announced In 2009 it was announced the preferred rolling stock option for this project was the Hitachi Super Express family of multiple units and they entered service in 2017 on the Great Western Main Line and 2019 on the East Coast Main Line The trains will be capable of a maximum speed of 140 mph with minor modifications with the necessary signalling modifications required of the Network Rail infrastructure in Britain likely to come from the phased rollout of the Europe wide European Rail Traffic Management System ERTMS Proposed and partly under construction edit High Speed 2 edit Main article High Speed 2 Following several studies and consultations on high speed rail in 2009 the UK Government formally announced the High Speed 2 project establishing a company to produce a feasibility study to examine route options and financing for a new high speed railway in the UK This study began on the assumption the route would be a new purpose built high speed line connected to High Speed 1 to the Channel tunnel and from London to the West Midlands via Heathrow Airport relieving traffic on the West Coast Main Line WCML Conventional high speed rail technology would be used as opposed to Maglev The rolling stock would be capable of travelling on the existing Network Rail infrastructure if required with the route intersecting with the existing WCML and the East Coast Main Line ECML A cancelled second phase of the project was planned to reach further north to Manchester Sheffield and Leeds as well as linking into the Midland Main Line Northern Powerhouse Rail edit Main article Northern Powerhouse Rail In June 2014 the chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne proposed a high speed rail link Northern Powerhouse Rail also known as High Speed 3 or High Speed North between Liverpool and Newcastle Sheffield Hull The line would use the existing route between Liverpool and Newcastle Hull and a new route from to Sheffield will follow the same route to Manchester Victoria and then a new line from Victoria to Sheffield with additional tunnels and other infrastructure High speed rolling stock edit As of August 2023 the following rolling stock on the UK network is capable of 125 mph or more Maximum speeds mph km h Family TOPS classification Operator and name Type Max recorded speed Max design speed Max speed in serviceSiemens Velaro 374 Eurostar e320 EMU 219 352 200 320 186 300 TGV TMST 373 Eurostar e300 EMU 209 334 7 186 300 186 300 Hitachi A train AT300 395 Southeastern Javelin EMU 157 252 38 140 225 140 225 800 GWR IET LNER Azuma BMU Not known 140 225 125 200 801 LNER Azuma EMU 140 225 125 200 802 GWR IET TransPennine Express Nova 1 Hull Trains Paragon BMU 140 225 125 200 803 Lumo unnamed EMU 140 225 125 200 805 Avanti West Coast TBC BMU 140 225 125 200 807 Avanti West Coast TBC EMU 140 225 125 200 810 EMR InterCity Aurora BMU 140 225 125 200 InterCity 225 91 Mark 4 coaches LNER InterCity 225 Electric Loco 162 261 140 225 125 200 Alstom Pendolino 390 Avanti West Coast Pendolino EMU 162 261 39 140 225 125 200 CAF Civity 397 TransPennine Express Nova 2 EMU 125 200 125 200 InterCity 125 43 HST Mark 3 coaches ScotRail Inter7City Diesel Loco 148 240 125 200 125 200 Class 67 67 Diesel Loco 143 230 40 125 200 125 200 Alstom Coradia 180 Grand Central Adelante DHMU 125 200 125 200 125 200 Bombardier Voyager 220 CrossCountry Voyager DEMU 125 200 125 200 125 200 Bombardier Voyager 221 Avanti West Coast Super Voyager CrossCountry Voyager DEMU 125 200 125 200 125 200 Bombardier Voyager 222 EMR InterCity Meridian DEMU 125 200 125 200 125 200 In 2011 the fastest timetabled start to stop run by a UK domestic train service was the Hull Trains 07 30 King s Cross to Hull which covered the 125 4 km 78 miles from Stevenage to Grantham in 42 minutes at an average speed of 179 1 km h 111 4 mph This was operated by a Class 180 diesel unit running under the wires at the time and is now operated by Class 802 Paragon bi mode units operating on electric power on this section This was matched by several Leeds to London Class 91 operated East Coast trains if their two minute recovery allowance for this section is excluded from the public timetable 41 Local metro and other rail systems edit nbsp A London Underground S stock trainMain articles Rapid transit in the United Kingdom Commuter rail in the United Kingdom List of modern tramway and light rail systems in the United Kingdom and List of British heritage and private railways A number of towns and cities have rapid transit networks Underground technology is used in the Glasgow subway Merseyrail centred on Liverpool London Underground centred on London London Overground and the London Docklands Light Railway centred on London and the Tyne and Wear Metro centred on Newcastle upon Tyne Light rail systems in the form of trams are in Birmingham Croydon Manchester Nottingham Sheffield and Edinburgh These systems use a combination of street running tramways and where available reserved right of way or former conventional rail lines in some suburbs Blackpool has the one remaining traditional tram system Monorails heritage tramways miniature railways and funiculars also exist in several places In addition there are a number of heritage mainly steam standard and narrow gauge railways and a few industrial railways and tramways Some lines which appear to be heritage operations sometimes claim to be part of the public transport network the Romney Hythe and Dymchurch Railway in Kent regularly transports schoolchildren Most major cities have some form of commuter rail network These include Belfast Birmingham Bristol Cardiff Edinburgh Glasgow Leeds Liverpool London and Manchester Goods services editMain article Rail freight transport in Great Britain nbsp Million tonnes of rail freight moved in the UK from 1983 to 2021 annual rolling average There was a large decrease in coal carried in 1984 5 due to the miners strike 42 nbsp Billion tonne kilometres of rail freight moved in the UK from 1983 to 2019 43 There are four main goods operating companies in the UK the largest of which is DB Cargo UK formerly DB Schenker formerly English Welsh amp Scottish EWS There are also several smaller independent operators including Mendip Rail Types of freight carried include intermodal in essence containerised freight and coal metals oil and construction materials The Beeching Cuts in contrast to passenger services greatly modernised the goods sector replacing inefficient wagons with containerised regional hubs 44 Freight services had been in steady decline since the 1930s initially because of the reduction in manufacturing and then road haulage s cost advantage in combination with higher wages 45 46 Since 1995 however the amount of freight carried on the railways has increased sharply due to increased reliability and competition as well as international services 45 47 In 2000 the Department for Transport s Transport Ten Year Plan called for an 80 increase in rail freight 48 Statistics on freight are specified in terms of the weight of freight lifted and the net tonne kilometre being freight weight multiplied by distance carried 116 6 million tonnes of freight was lifted in the 2013 4 period against 138 million tonnes in 1986 7 a decrease of 16 49 However a record 22 7 billion net tonne kilometres 14 billion net ton miles of freight movement were recorded in 2013 4 against 16 6 billion 10 1 billion in 1986 7 an increase of 38 49 Coal made up 36 of the total net tonne kilometre though its share was declining 50 Rail freight had increased its market share since privatisation by net tonne kilometres from 7 4 in 1998 to 11 1 in 2013 51 Growth was partly due to more international services including the Channel Tunnel and Port of Felixstowe which is containerised 52 Nevertheless as of 2008 network bottlenecks and insufficient investment in catering for 9 6 high shipping containers restricted growth 47 A symbolic loss to the rail freight industry in Great Britain was the custom of the Royal Mail which from 2004 discontinued use of its 49 train fleet and switched to road haulage after a near 170 year preference for trains Mail trains had long been part of the tradition of the railways in Great Britain famously celebrated in the film Night Mail for which W H Auden wrote the poem of the same name Although Royal Mail suspended mail trains in January 2004 this decision was reversed in December of the same year and Class 325s are now used on some routes including between London Warrington and Scotland citation needed Train leasing services editAt the time of privatisation the rolling stock of British Rail was sold to the new operators as in the case of the freight companies or to the three ROSCOs rolling stock companies which lease or hire stock to passenger and freight train operators Leasing is relatively commonplace in transport since it enables operating companies to avoid the complication associated with raising sufficient capital to purchase assets instead assets are leased and paid for from ongoing revenue Since 1994 there has been a growth in smaller spot hire companies that provide rolling stock on short term contracts Many of these have grown thanks to the selling off of locomotives by the large freight operators especially EWS Unlike other major players in the privatised railway system of Great Britain the ROSCOs are not subject to close regulation by the economic regulatory authority They were expected to compete with one another and they do although not in all respects Competition codes of practice edit Since privatisation in 1995 the ROSCOs have faced criticism from several quarters including passenger train operating companies such as GNER Arriva and FirstGroup on the basis they are acting as an oligopoly to keep lease prices higher than they would be in a competitive market In 1998 Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott asked rail regulator John Swift to investigate the market s operation and make recommendations Many believed Prescott favoured much closer regulation of the ROSCOs perhaps bringing them into the net of contract specific regulation i e requiring every rolling stock lease to be approved by the Rail Regulator before it could be valid Swift s report did not find major problems with the operation of what was then an infant market and instead recommended the ROSCOs sign up to voluntary non binding codes of practice in relation to their future behaviour Prescott did not like this but he did not have the legislative time allocation to do much about it Swift s successor as Rail Regulator Tom Winsor agreed with Swift and the ROSCOs were happy to go along with codes of practice coupled with the Rail Regulator s new powers to deal with abuse of dominance and anti competitive behaviour under the Competition Act 1998 In establishing these codes the Rail Regulator made it clear he expected the ROSCOs to adhere to their letter and spirit The codes of practice were duly put in place and for the next five years the Rail Regulator received no complaints about ROSCO behaviour White paper 2004 edit nbsp An Avanti West Coast Class 390 Pendolino train at Stafford stationIn July 2004 the DFT s White Paper on the future of the railways expressed dissatisfaction with the operation of the rolling stock leasing market and the belief there may have been excessive pricing on the part of the ROSCOs In June 2006 Gwyneth Dunwoody chair of the Transport Select Committee of the House of Commons called for an investigation into the companies 53 Transport commentator Christian Wolmar has asserted the high cost of leasing is due to the way the franchises are distributed to the train operating companies While the TOCs are negotiating for a franchise they have some freedom to propose different rolling stock options It is only once they have won the franchise however they start negotiating with the ROSCOs The ROSCO will know the TOC s requirements and also knows the TOC has to obtain a fixed mix of rolling stock which puts the train operating company at a disadvantage in its negotiations with the ROSCO 54 Competition Commission edit On 29 November 2006 following a June 2006 complaint by the DfT alleging excessive pricing by the ROSCOs the Office of Rail Regulation as it was then called announced it was minded to refer the operation of the market for passenger rolling stock to the Competition Commission citing amongst other factors problems in the DfT s own franchising policy as responsible for what may be regarded as a dysfunctional market ORR said it will consult the industry and the public on what to do and will publish its decision in April 2007 If the ORR does refer the market to the Competition Commission there may well be a hiatus in investment in new rolling stock whilst the ROSCOs and their parent companies wait to hear what return they will be allowed to make on their train fleets This could have the unintended consequence of intensifying the problem of overcrowding on some routes because TOCs will be unable to lengthen their trains or acquire new ones if they need the ROSCOs to co operate in their acquisition or financing Some commentators have suggested that such an outcome would be detrimental to the public interest This is especially striking since the National Audit Office in its November 2006 report on the renewal and upgrade of the West Coast Main Line said that the capacity of the trains and the network will be full in the next few years and advocated train lengthening as an important measure to cope with sharply higher passenger numbers The Competition Commission conducted an investigation and published provisional findings 55 on 7 August 2008 The report was published on 7 April 2009 56 A press release 57 summarised the recommendations as follows introduce longer franchise terms in the region of 12 to 15 years or longer which would allow TOCs to realise the benefits and recover the costs of switching to alternative new or used rolling stock over a longer period which should increase the incentives and ability for TOCs to exercise choice assess the benefits of alternative new or used rolling stock proposals beyond the franchise term and across other franchises when evaluating franchise bids This will encourage a wider choice of rolling stock to be considered in franchise proposals irrespective of franchise length ensure franchise invitations to tender ITTs are specified in such a way franchise bidders are allowed a choice of rolling stock requiring the ROSCOs to remove non discrimination requirements from the Codes of Practice which would provide greater incentives for the TOCs to seek improved terms from the ROSCOs requiring rolling stock lessors to provide TOCs with a set list of information when making a lease rental offer for used rolling stock which would give TOCs the ability to negotiate more effectivelyLeasing companies ROSCO edit See also Rolling stock companyThree companies took over British Rail s rolling stock on privatisation Angel Trains has 4 400 vehicles in the UK owned by AMP Capital Investors PSP Investments and International Public Partnerships Eversholt Rail Group owns a fleet of over 4 000 vehicles and is owned by CK Hutchison Holdings and Cheung Kong Infrastructure Holdings Porterbrook leases some 3 500 locomotives trains and freight wagons owned by a consortium including Alberta Investment Management Corporation Allianz Electricite de France and Vantage Infrastructure A number of other companies have since entered the leasing market Sovereign Trains a company that forms part of the same group as the open access operator Grand Central Sovereign Trains owned the rolling stock operated by Grand Central Dissolved after the stock was sold to Angel Trains 58 QW Rail Leasing a joint venture between the National Australia Bank and SMBC Leasing amp Finance to provide the EMU rolling stock to London Overground Macquarie European Rail in April 2009 Lloyds TSB entered the rolling stock market by funding the purchase of 30 new Class 379s for National Express East Anglia In November 2012 Lloyds sold the company to Macquarie Group Beacon Rail 59 owns Class 68 and Class 88 locomotives as well as Class 220 Class 313 and Class 221 DMUs 60 61 UK Rail Leasing owns some Class 56 locomotives Rock Rail Limited owns Class 717 Siemens Desiro EMUs in service on Govia Thameslink Railway s Great Northern routes Stadler Flirt Class 745 EMUs and Class 755 BMUs entering service on Abellio s Greater Anglia franchise Bombardier Aventra Class 701 EMUs entering service on FirstGroup and MTR s South Western franchise Hitachi Intercity BMUs for service on Abellio s East Midlands franchise and Hitachi Intercity EMUs and BMUs for service on First Group and Trenitalia s Avanti West Coast franchise 62 Spot hire companies edit Spot hire companies provide short term leasing of rolling stock MiddlePeak Railways a locomotive hire amp lease company with a stock of locomotives similar to Class 08 amp NS 0 6 0 600 Class shunting locomotives other locomotives rolling stock amp parts 63 64 GL Railease owned by GATX Capital and Lombard a subsidiary of the Royal Bank of Scotland Harry Needle Railroad Company an industrial and main line locomotive hire and overhaul company Operates Class 08 shunting locomotives and Class 20 locomotives 65 Riviera Trains a spot hire company with a fleet of Class 47 locomotives This company works closely with DB Cargo UK 66 West Coast Railways a spot hire and railtour operator with a stock of Class 37 and Class 47 locomotives as well as the rebuilt Class 57 locomotive Eastern Rail Services a rolling stock spot hire company providing leasing and hire acquisition parts supply and overhaul and technical advice Statutory framework editSee also Structure of the rail industry in the United Kingdom Railways in Great Britain are in the private sector but they are subject to control by central government and to economic and safety regulation by arms of government In 2006 using powers in the Railways Act 2005 the DfT took over most of the functions of the now wound up Strategic Rail Authority The DfT now itself runs competitions for the award of passenger rail franchises and once awarded monitors and enforces the contracts with the private sector franchisees Franchises specify the passenger rail services which are to be run and the quality and other conditions for example the cleanliness of trains station facilities and opening hours the punctuality and reliability of trains which the operators have to meet Some franchises receive a subsidy from the DfT for doing so and some are cash positive which means the franchisee pays the DfT for the contract Some franchises start life as subsidised and over their life move to being cash positive The other regulatory authority for the privatised railway is the Office of Rail and Road previously the Office of Rail Regulation which following the Railways Act 2005 is the combined economic and safety regulator It replaced the Rail Regulator on 5 July 2004 The Rail Safety and Standards Board still exists however established in 2003 on the recommendations of a public inquiry it leads the industry s progress in health and safety matters The principal modern railway statutes are Railways Act 1993 Competition Act 1998 insofar as it confers competition powers on the Office of Rail and Road Transport Act 2000 Railways and Transport Safety Act 2003 Railways Act 2005Industry bodies editStatutory authorities edit Office of Rail and Road Department for Transport UK Notified BodiesDevolved authorities edit Transport Scotland Transport for WalesNetwork and signalling operations edit Railtrack 1996 2002 Network Rail 2002 A not for dividend company limited by guarantee Other national entities edit Institution of Railway Operators Rail Delivery Group Rail Freight Group Rail Passengers Council and Committees Rail Safety and Standards Board Rail Forum Midlands Railway Industry Association Railway Mission Railway Study AssociationTrade unions edit The railways are one of the most heavily unionised industrial sectors in the UK Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen ASLEF National Union of Rail Maritime and Transport Workers RMT Transport Salaried Staffs Association TSSA Regional entities edit See Passenger transport executive Transport for West Midlands TfGM Transport for Greater Manchester Merseytravel Metro West Yorkshire Metro Nexus Tyne and Wear Passenger Transport Executive Travel South Yorkshire South Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive SPT Strathclyde Partnership for Transport TfL Transport for London See List of companies operating trains in the United Kingdom Freight companies edit GB Railfreight DB Cargo UK Freightliner Direct Rail Services Colas Rail Devon and Cornwall Railways Mendip RailOpen access and other non franchised passenger operators edit Eurostar Grand Central Heathrow Express Hull Trains Venice Simplon Orient Express VSOE Lumo train operating company 1820s 1840s Early companies editThis is only the earliest of the main line openings for a more comprehensive list of the hundreds of early railways see List of early British railway companies Stockton and Darlington Railway 1825 First steam hauled passenger railway in the world Canterbury and Whitstable Railway 1830 First steam hauled passenger railway to issue season tickets Liverpool and Manchester Railway 1830 First InterCity passenger railway Grand Junction Railway 1833 The line built by the company was the first trunk railway to be completed in England and arguably the world s first long distance railway with steam traction London and Greenwich Railway 1836 First steam railway in the capital the first to be built specifically for passengers and the first elevated railway London and Birmingham Railway 1837 First Intercity line to be built into London Midland Counties Railway 1839 Birmingham and Derby Junction Railway BDJR 1839 North Midland Railway 1840 Taff Vale Railway 1840 Heritage and private editMain article List of British heritage and private railways nbsp Heritage railways are popular tourist attractions The photo shows a preserved locomotive BR Standard 7MT 70013 Oliver Cromwell on the North Norfolk Railway on 11 March 2010 Many lines closed by British Railways including many closed during the Beeching cuts have been restored and reopened as heritage railways A few have been relaid as narrow gauge but the majority are standard gauge Most use both steam and diesel locomotives for haulage Most heritage railways are operated as tourist attractions and do not provide regular year round train services Proposed line re openings editSeveral pressure groups are campaigning for the re opening of closed railway lines in Great Britain These include Ashington Bedlington Newcastle 67 Marlow Branch Bourne End High Wycombe 68 Cambridge Oxford East West Rail 69 This project was approved by the Government in November 2011 Carmarthen Aberystwyth line Colne Skipton Skipton East Lancashire Rail Action Partnership 70 Great Central Railway Notts Leicester Lynn and Hunstanton Railway 71 Peak Rail Matlock Bakewell Under funded line Portishead Railway from Portishead to Bristol Temple Meads 72 South Staffordshire Line Stourbridge Walsall Lichfield St Andrews Rail Link Leuchars St Andrews Wealden Line Uckfield Lewes 73 Woodhead Line Hadfield Penistone York to Beverley Line York Beverley From 1995 until 2009 27 new lines totalling 199 track miles and 68 stations were opened with 65 further new station sites identified by Network Rail or government for possible construction 74 On 15 June 2009 the Association of Train Operating Companies ATOC published the report Connecting Communities Expanding Access to the Rail Network detailing schemes around England where it believed there was a commercial business case for passenger network expansion The published proposals involved the re opening or new construction of 40 stations serving communities with populations of over 15 000 including 14 schemes involving the re opening or reconstruction of rail lines for passenger services These would be short lead time local projects to be completed in timescales ranging from 2 years 9 months to 6 years once approved by local and regional governments Network Rail and the Department for Transport complementing existing long term national projects 75 76 Most populous towns without rail services edit This is a list of towns in England that do not have any sort of rail service Services taken into account include National Rail tram and metro services such as the Manchester Metrolink or the Tyne and Wear Metro The first list is of separate towns The second is of towns that form part of larger conurbations Built up areas edit Town Population 2019 estimate 77 Railway station closed NotesRushden 41 387 1969 78 Proposals have been put forward for Rushden Parkway railway station on the Midland Main Line to the west of the town Coalville 41 223 1964 79 Proposed for reopening on the Leicester Burton upon Trent line 80 Abingdon on Thames 40 074 1963 81 Radley railway station lies less than a mile outside the town s boundaries Canvey 38 849 N A Benfleet is sited nearby on the mainland Blyth 39 535 1964 82 The Northumberland Line project is reopening a railway passenger service to Newsham on the edge of Blyth by 2024 Wisbech 35 681 1968 83 A 2009 report stated that it was feasible to reopen the Bramley Line to March railway station for 12 million as the line was extant but unused Since then little had been done and the cost had risen to an estimated 70 million by 2019 84 Bideford 30 783 1965Witney 30 518 1962 83 Norton Radstock 30 319 1966Consett 30 023 1967 85 Clay Cross North Wingfield 29 975 1967Burntwood 29 525 1965 The town is served by the Chasewater Railway which is a heritage railway Ashington 28 139 1964 86 The Northumberland Line project is reopening a railway passenger service to Ashington by 2024 Haverhill 27 481 1967 87 Portishead 26 535 1964 As of 2020 update there are plans afoot to reopen Portishead station Daventry 25 781 1958 The nearest station at present is Long Buckby on the Northampton Loop Proposals have been made to reopen Weedon railway station as a new Daventry Parkway station 88 89 90 91 Both stations are about the same distance about 4 5 mi 7 2 km from central Daventry Stubbington 25 239 N A Lies within the Borough of Fareham and is 2 miles from Fareham railway station Stanley County Durham 22 553 1955 The previous station was West Stanley railway station Maldon 22 032 1964 92 Clevedon 21 138 1966Bordon 20 789 1957Dereham 21 362 1969 The town is served by a station on the Mid Norfolk Railway which is a heritage railway Stourport on Severn 21 096 1970 93 Dinnington 20 443 1929 Previous station was Dinnington and Laughton railway station which is on a line still used for freight Hythe 20 402 1966 The previous station was on a line in use until 2016 Built up area subdivisions edit Town Population 2011 census Railway station closed Urban area NotesDudley 79 379 94 1964 95 West Midlands Conurbation The town is served by Dudley Port station just over a mile from the town centre but outside the borough boundary Work began in January 2020 on a 449 million 6 8 mile 10 9 km extension of the West Midlands Metro tram system from Wednesbury to Dudley on the formation of the old South Staffordshire line 96 Gosport 71 529 97 1953 98 South Hampshire While Gosport does not have a railway station Portsmouth Harbour station is a short pedestrian ferry ride away Newcastle under Lyme 75 082 99 1964 100 Stoke on Trent Built up Area Newcastle under Lyme lies 45 minutes on foot from Stoke on Trent railway station Washington 67 085 101 1964 Wearside The town previously had a station on what is now the mothballed Leamside line It has been the subject of many reopening proposals 102 including a potential extension of the Tyne and Wear Metro system 103 Waterlooville 64 350 N A South Hampshire Lies within the Borough of Havant which has four stations Halesowen 58 135 104 1958 105 West Midlands conurbation A 40 minute walk from Old Hill railway station Leigh 52 855 1969 106 Greater Manchester Built up Area Lies on the Leigh Salford Manchester Bus Rapid Transit guided busway that links Leigh Salford and Manchester City centre Swadlincote 45 000 107 1947 108 Burton upon Trent Built up area A reopening of the Leicester Burton upon Trent line would see a station at Gresley south of the town 80 Kingswood 40 734 N A Bristol Built up AreaSkelmersdale 38 813 109 1963 110 Wigan Urban Area Skelmersdale was designated as a new town in 1961 with a focus on people owning cars However a proposal was considered by the Lancashire County Council 111 The Department for Transport announced in July 2022 that it was rejecting the Strategic Outline Business Case throwing the scheme into doubt 112 Dunstable 30 184 113 1965 114 Luton Dunstable Urban Area Lies on a guided busway that links to the town to stations in Luton Willenhall 28 480 115 116 1965 117 West Midlands Conurbation The railway station at Willenhall which is on a freight diversionary line between Wolverhampton and Walsall Tame Bridge railway stations will reopen to passengers in 2023 118 Aldridge 26 988 119 120 1965 121 West Midlands Conurbation The station at Aldridge has been proposed for reopening by 2040 It is on a freight diversionary line between Walsall and Water Orton railway stations 122 123 Ferndown 26 559 124 N A South East Dorset ConurbationWoodley 25 932 125 N A Reading Wokingham Urban Area Earley station is on the southern boundary of the parish but separated from Woodley by the A3290 dual carriageway Woodley is within the Borough of Wokingham which has six stations including the aforementioned Earley Rawtenstall Lancashire 23 128 126 1972 Accrington Rossendale Built up area The town has a station on the East Lancashire Railway served by a heritage railway Links with adjacent countries editGreat Britain standard gauge France Eurostar via the Channel Tunnel formerly by Train ferries Belgium Eurostar via France using the Channel Tunnel Netherlands Eurostar via France and Belgium using the Channel Tunnel Rail ferry rail services edit Netherlands Dutchflyer rail sea rail service Ireland SailRail service via Holyhead Cairnryan or FishguardSee also editCampaign to Bring Back British Rail Campaign to Electrify Britain s Railways Concessionary fares on the British railway network Financing of the rail industry in Great Britain Great British Railways History of rail transport in Great Britain Irish Sea tunnel List of funicular railways London Post Office Railway Mainline steam trains in Great Britain National Railway Museum Rail transport by country Royal Train Transport in the United Kingdom UK UltraspeedReferences editCitations edit a b c ORR Table 1220 Passenger Journeys Office of Rail and Road 3 June 2021 Archived from 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