logo
Overblown infrastructure projects damage lives and imperil democracy. Why is Britain addicted to them?

Overblown infrastructure projects damage lives and imperil democracy. Why is Britain addicted to them?

The Guardian4 hours ago

There appear to be two main determinants of what infrastructure gets built. The first is whether it provides large and lucrative contracts for powerful corporations. The second is whether ministers can pose beside it in hard hats and yellow jackets. Otherwise, it is hard to explain the decisions made.
Both determinants favour large and spectacular schemes. Big corporations don't want to dabble in minor improvements: real money comes from prestige projects over which governments cannot afford to lose face, ensuring that they keep throwing cash, however high the budget spirals. And few ministers want to pose beside a new bus stop: a grand ego demands a grand setting.
Last week, the government quietly flicked another £590m at the planned Lower Thames Crossing, to the east of London. That's the kind of money other public services must beg for. Compare it, for example, with the funding allocated in this month's spending review for local amenities such as parks, libraries and swimming pools. Across the whole of England, they received £350m. But the extra money for the Lower Thames Crossing buys less than a mile of road. It means that the total costs of the scheme, according to the government, have risen to £9.2bn, for 14 miles of road.
Even this is a major underestimate. As the Transport Action Network (Tan) points out, several aspects of the project, such as necessary upgrades to junctions and connecting roads, to take the extra traffic, have been excluded from the total, disguising the full cost. TAN estimates it at £16bn. That's more than all the new money (£15bn) trumpeted by Rachel Reeves this month for buses, trains and trams in England, outside London. It's seven times as much as the Treasury allocated to fixing England's school classrooms. Or the government could use it to double the amount invested in the National Housing Bank, to build social and affordable homes: which, by contrast, we need.
The benefit-cost ratio (BCR) is shocking, whichever way you slice it. Using the official figure for costs, the government body National Highways estimated the BCR at 0.48: in other words, a net loss of 52 pence for every pound spent. It then threw in some vaguely defined 'wider economic benefits' to deliver an 'adjusted BCR' of 1.22. That's still low value for money. Compare it with fixing potholes and maintaining local roads, which has a BCR of 7, officially 'very high' value for money. Oh, and guess what? The maintenance backlog for England's local roads is just over £16bn.
I asked the Campaign for Better Transport to estimate what else might be done with the official figure of £9.2bn. It told me the money would enable every community in England to have what the government defines as a 'reasonable level' of bus services for the next nine years. Or it could pay for 11,400 miles (18,400km) of cycle lanes, or 5,700 miles (9,200km) of bus lanes.
So why is this vastly expensive white elephant endlessly inflated while crucial services and benefits are cut? The clue is the 'vastly expensive' bit: a single project on this scale can be extremely lucrative for large corporations, and they will lobby for it with commensurate vigour.
The government insists the new road will relieve congestion. But even 30 years ago, official assessments showed that new roads generate new traffic, a phenomenon called 'induced demand'. They shift congestion to the next pinch point, which becomes another issue for the government to solve: jobs-for-life for the construction industry. Using modelling data from National Highways, Thurrock council estimates that traffic on the Dartford crossing, which the new road is supposed to relieve, will return to current levels in just five years. Given that the Lower Thames Crossing will take at least seven years to build, with massive disruption throughout, it's hard to detect the public benefit. It will also funnel more traffic on to the M25, A13 and M2, greatly increasing congestion.
TAN has done what successive governments, astonishingly, have failed to do: commissioned a report on how demand for freight and passenger transport in the region and on the wider network might best be met. It found that new heavy freight and passenger rail connections would provide a far more effective solution, at roughly a quarter of the price. Even with added rail loading gauge upgrades and electrification, bus routes, ferries and trams, this approach would remain far cheaper, while meeting public need, reducing pollution and social exclusion and catalysing the long-overdue transition to rail freight in the UK.
But neither successive governments nor National Highways have seriously examined such alternatives to the crossing. For the past 60 years, the answer has been roads, regardless of the question. Not only has National Highways ignored other means of solving the problem, it has become promoter as well as planner of the scheme, engaging in a public relations offensive that looks to me like a crashing conflict of interest. If you want what transport planners call a 'modal shift' from one kind of travel to another, first you need a conceptual shift. But we won't get it from existing agencies. National Highways is a relic of another age, unfit for purpose, driving us towards disaster. It should be scrapped.
The greatest costs of schemes such as this are felt not in our tax bills, but in our bodies, minds and surroundings. The government estimates the new road will generate 6.6m tonnes of carbon dioxide. It would greatly increase both air pollution and traffic noise, and commit us to an even greater extent to car driving, with all its destructive implications for health, fitness and mental wellbeing, community cohesion and social attitudes.
As a rule, though there are exceptions, what improves our lives are multiple small interventions, tailored to local needs and responsive to local democracy. What damages our lives are prestige projects tailored to the demands of big finance and corporate shareholders. The capital behind them, that sometimes seems more powerful than governments, treats democracy and public need as traffic engineers treat pedestrians – obstacles to be designed out of the way.
Sometimes big infrastructure is necessary, but at all times it is a threat to democracy. This is why governments should approach it with caution and scepticism. Instead, they act as hucksters for corporate boondoggles. Such schemes allow politicians to stamp their mark on the nation, to don the hard hat and announce: 'I did this.' Look on my works, ye mighty …
One measure of a nation's success is the extent to which it can reduce its dependence on road transport, in favour of inclusive, low-impact travel. Our government seems committed to failure.
George Monbiot is a Guardian columnist

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Keir Starmer heads for crucial Nato summit TODAY vowing to hit new target for spending 3.5% of GDP on defence... but ministers refuse to say where the extra £30BILLION is coming from
Keir Starmer heads for crucial Nato summit TODAY vowing to hit new target for spending 3.5% of GDP on defence... but ministers refuse to say where the extra £30BILLION is coming from

Daily Mail​

time13 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Keir Starmer heads for crucial Nato summit TODAY vowing to hit new target for spending 3.5% of GDP on defence... but ministers refuse to say where the extra £30BILLION is coming from

Keir Starmer is heading for a crucial Nato summit today vowing to hit a new target for defence budgets. The PM will join fellow leaders from the military alliance in The Hague after signing up to the goal of spending 3.5 per cent of GDP on defence. Another 1.5 per cent will be committed to related measures such as cyber security, under the package demanded by Donald Trump. However, ministers have refused to say where the UK will find the extra money - around £30billion on top of existing plans - with Rachel Reeves already scrambling to balance the books. There are also claims that the figures are being fiddled and countries are watering down the pledges. A draft communique appears to have pushed back the timetable for hitting the level from 2032 to 2035. The language has also reportedly been watered down from 'we commit' to 'allies commit', with Spain flatly dismissing the idea of meeting the goal. Mr Trump himself has said America is not bound by it. 'We've been supporting NATO so long… So I don't think we should, but I think that the NATO countries should, absolutely,' he said on Friday. By contrast, Germany has said it will accelerate its spending to hit the core defence target by 2029 – six years early – amid growing global instability and the prospect of a war in the Middle East. That involves Berlin finding upwards of $60billion a year more for the military. The summit comes after Sir Keir's meeting yesterday with Volodymyr Zelensky at No10. The Ukrainian president will also be at the summit. The increase to 3.5 per cent in Italy would be equivalent to around $46billion a year, Canada $45billion, France £44billion and the UK roughly $40billion. Spain allocated just 1.24 per cent of GDP on defence in 2024. That could have left it facing funding a $36billion boost despite having a relatively small economy. But left-wing PM Pedro Sanchez said on Sunday that it was only looking to hit 2.1 per cent of GDP. 'We fully respect the legitimate desire of other countries to increase their defence investment, but we are not going to do so,' he said in a TV address. The cash cost of the goal for each country have been estimated by comparing the Nato figures for spending levels in 2024 to World Bank figures for the size of GDP. The current target is 2 per cent, which has not been met by all states. Only Poland currently tops the 3.5 per cent level. The US itself spent 3.38 per cent on defence in 2024, although the sheer size of its economy meant that dwarfed contributions from the rest of the alliance. Britain allocated 2.33 per cent of GDP to defence last year, and Keir Starmer has committed to reaching 2.5 per cent by April 2027. There is an 'ambition' of increasing that to 3 per cent at some stage in the next parliament - likely to run to 2034. Nato members effectively decide themselves whether they're hitting the 1.5 per cent element of the target, and there are fears Labour will try to include items not strictly related to defence. Downing Street sources said, for example, that it could include spending on beefing up energy security amid the switch to NetZero and fighting migrant-smuggling gangs. Former defence secretary Sir Ben Wallace posted on X: 'Tomorrow at the Nato summit we will witness the UK Government trying to con the US and Nato with spin on defence spending. 'By folding in other departments' spending and with no real defence £ increases, the PM will claim 5 per cent. 'The threat to our country is real not spin. This Government thinks it can use smoke and mirrors to deceive the public and Donald Trump. 'This is an insult to our troops who will see no significant new money. It fools no one.'

Broadway House flats in Bradford approved despite 'flood risk'
Broadway House flats in Bradford approved despite 'flood risk'

BBC News

time15 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Broadway House flats in Bradford approved despite 'flood risk'

Part of a Bradford office building is set to be converted into flats despite a warning that it is unsuitable for residential use due to a "high risk of flooding".Broadway House, on the newly-pedestrianised area of Bank Street, is made up of ground-floor businesses and office spaces on its first, second and third this year, property developer Springer revealed plans to convert the upper floors into 28 works have now been approved by Bradford Council despite an objection from the Environment Agency, which said residential use of the building should be avoided because the site was within a flood plain. The agency told the Local Democracy Reporting Service the building's location meant there was a "high risk of flooding". "We recommend that planning permission is refused on this basis."We continue to urge planning authorities to follow national guidance to reduce flood risk and protect communities."When asked why the flats were approved despite the objection, a Bradford Council spokesperson said a flood risk assessment (FRA) had found the proposal "does not introduce unacceptable flood risks".They added: "The upper-floor location of the residential units significantly reduces vulnerability, and the development does not increase flood risk to the site or wider area."The FRA also sets out a number of flood risk mitigation measures that are to be implemented in order to ensure the impacts of any potential flooding are minimised. "Given these considerations, the proposal can be deemed acceptable in terms of flood risk." Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

NatWest exec Holbourn leads race to run National Wealth Fund
NatWest exec Holbourn leads race to run National Wealth Fund

Sky News

time16 minutes ago

  • Sky News

NatWest exec Holbourn leads race to run National Wealth Fund

A senior executive at NatWest Group heads a pack of contenders to become the next boss of Rachel Reeves's National Wealth Fund (NWF). Sky News has learnt that Oliver Holbourn, who is stepping down as chief executive of NatWest's RBS International arm, is the current frontrunner to take the helm of the Treasury-supervised investment vehicle. Mr Holbourn is no stranger to Whitehall, having previously run UK Financial Investments, the entity set up to manage British taxpayers' stakes in Lloyds Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland. Both banks have since returned to full private sector ownership. After leaving UKFI, Mr Holbourn joined NatWest - then called RBS - as its head of strategy, before taking on the leadership of its international business in 2022. The chancellor has been seeking a new head of the National Wealth Fund since February, when the former HSBC Holdings chief John Flint announced that he would step down from his role running the UK Infrastructure Bank - which has been absorbed into the NWF. In March, the Treasury said the fund would be given a new strategic steer to enable it to take on higher-risk projects in clean energy, advanced manufacturing, digital technologies and transport. It claimed that the NWF would unlock more than £70bn in private investment. "My number one mission is kickstarting economic growth through our Plan for Change to make Great Britain a stronger, more resilient country and put more money into the pockets of working people," Ms Reeves said at the time. "I am determined to go further and faster to get our economy growing. By directing tens of billions of pounds into the UK's industrial strengths, we'll deliver the high-skilled, high-paid jobs of the future in every corner of the country." Other candidates are said to be in the frame to succeed Mr Flint if Mr Holbourn does not get appointed to the role.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store