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Rail Partners: inflexible contracts deny revenue opportunities

Train operators must be given greater freedoms to attract customers back and help the network return to growth.

That’s the message from Rail Partners, which represents passenger and freight operators. It argues that £1.6 billion to £2.1bn worth of revenue will potentially be missed over the next two years, because of inflexible contractual arrangements with operators that are “no longer appropriate” post-pandemic.

It says the increased revenue would allow the Government to release more taxpayers’ money to be used on priorities such as NHS backlogs, rather than funding the railway.

“The gap in rail finances cannot be closed by cost savings alone. A sole focus on reducing costs risks a spiral of decline, with cuts to services putting passengers off, leading to further cost pressures and cuts,” warned Rail Partners CEO Andy Bagnall.

Its report by independent economic analyst Oxera, Fork in the Tracks: Attracting customers back to the railway, says the industry faces a hole in its finances with taxpayers contributing around £2bn more annually than before the pandemic. 

“The railway finds itself at a fork in the tracks - facing one of its most significant points of inflection since privatisation. It faces a fundamental question of how best to avoid decline and accelerate recovery,” says the report. 

“Delays to wider reform and legislation, as well as a backdrop of industrial action, compound these questions. 

“If we get it wrong, the railway faces a protracted hiatus, a stunted recovery from the pandemic, and most likely a permanently smaller railway.”

To read the full story, see RAIL 972.

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  • Güntürk Üstün - 05/12/2022 23:10

    Headquartered in London (UK), Rail Partners Ltd brings together independent owning groups, train and freight operating companies. Rail Partners exists to make the railway better by harnessing the expertise and creativity of private sector operators for the benefit of those who use the railway, passengers and freight customers, and those who pay for it, including taxpayers. Dr. Güntürk Üstün

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