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HS2: Labour to confirm delay until 2033 after ‘litany of failure'

HS2: Labour to confirm delay until 2033 after ‘litany of failure'

Times4 hours ago

Angela Rayner is to face questions from the shadow home secretary Chris Philp as the prime minister is travelling back from the G7 summit in Canada.
The UK has been turned into an international 'laughing stock' over the failure to control the HS2 rail project, a minister acknowledged.
The housing and planning minister Matthew Pennycook said there were 'serious problems' with HS2 'in terms of accountability, project overruns, costs'.
He told LBC the way HS2 and other infrastructure projects had been handled 'reflect very poorly on us' as a country.
Pennycook said the Planning and Infrastructure Bill includes a number of changes that will 'speed up the consenting process for nationally significant infrastructure' and this week's infrastructure strategy 'seeks to reverse the frankly erratic decisions and underinvestment we've seen over the past 14 years'.
Mark Wild, chief executive of HS2 Ltd, is understood to have been astounded by his findings after he took control of the government-owned company in December last year.
The source said: 'Alexander wants to turn the tide on the whole thing. Wild has been tasked with looking at the entire project and the speech today is designed to tackle these fresh revelations and look at how we move forward.
'There has been a total lack of ministerial oversight in the past and we need to change that so the same mistakes are not made on Northern Powerhouse Rail or the Lower Thames Crossing.'
In December HS2 Ltd estimated the cost of building the railway would be between £54 and £66 billion in 2019 prices and between £67 and £83 billion in current prices.
Revelations last year that HS2 had spent £100 million of taxpayers' money to build a bat tunnel shocked Westminster. Wild said that he could not apologise for complying with the law but conceded that an 'extraordinary amount of money' had been spent on the barrier, in ancient woodland in Buckinghamshire, to comply with the law on protected species.
The transport secretary Heidi Alexander will tell the Commons that she is 'drawing a line in the sand' over the embattled rail project as the government tries to wrestle it back into order. The remaining section of the high-speed line between London and Birmingham will no longer be completed by 2033 and a delay of at least two years is now expected, according to reports.
Alexander will present the findings of an interim report by Mark Wild, chief executive of HS2 Ltd, the company responsible for the delivery of the project at 12.30pm.

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