In an open letter on behalf of a raft of construction bosses including 63 industry leaders, the Prime Minister has been asked to commit to the completion of HS2’s Eastern Leg in full.
Due to the increased speculation on the future of the route that will stretch from the West Midlands through to Leeds, leading rail, construction, and engineering firms from the High-Speed Rail Group (HSRG) and Railway Industry Association (RIA) have written to Boris Johnston.
The letter states that: “Businesses have invested millions in people, in skills, in technology, and in hardware to deliver HS2. To date, 16,000 people have been employed on the project, including over 500 apprentices. We had expected this to grow to 34,000 at peak construction, including 2,000 apprentices, over the coming years.”
It continues: “The question is often asked why infrastructure projects in the UK seem to cost more than elsewhere. And a big part of the answer lies in our propensity in the UK to review and re-open questions which had already been settled.”
“We are indulging in a debate on HS2 scope and design (again) well after construction has commenced. It was understandable that upon taking office in 2019 you reviewed HS2. But having taken the decision to deliver it in full, changing that now would have a devastating impact on confidence in the sector and drive higher costs as other elements would have to be redesigned,” adds the letter.
According to Tom Wadsworth, Director at the High-Speed Rail Group: “Last year the Prime Minister promised that HS2 would go ahead in full, including from the West Midlands to Leeds, and his own MPs have asked what he is going to do to level up if he doesn’t build the Eastern leg.”
Wadsworth also asserted: “Failing to deliver HS2 in full would undermine the Prime Minister’s commitment to leveling up and to net zero. So we are calling on the Prime Minister to reaffirm his promise to deliver HS2 in full, including the eastern leg.”
Among the signatories to the letter are Mace CEO Mark Reynolds, Keltbray CEO Darren James, Barhale Executive Director Andy Flowerday, Van Elle CEO Mark Cutler, VolverWessels CEO Alan Robertson and SSE Contracting Executive Chairman Neil Kirkby.