Virgin gets green light for Channel Tunnel trains in blow to Eurostar
Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Group is pushing ahead with plans to run trains through the Channel Tunnel after regulators approved its application to gain access to the line.
In a blow to Eurostar, the Office for Rail and Road (ORR) confirmed that Virgin could store its trains at the only UK depot available for the rail route.
That is despite Eurostar claiming that the facility at Temple Mills in east London was already full with its own carriages and that there was not enough space.
The dispute had threatened to stall Virgin's bid to bring competition to the Channel Tunnel for the first time since it opened in 1994.
However, findings from the ORR said that two of the depot's eight maintenance lanes are underused and could be allocated to Virgin, or the other two rivals eyeing the route.
Virgin said the announcement had removed the last major hurdle to it gaining access to the tunnel, clearing the way for it to launch a raft of new services from St Pancras International in London to Paris, Brussels and other cities on the Continent.
Virgin is one of three groups vying to compete with Eurostar, alongside Evolyn, backed by the Spanish Cosmen family, which is the leading investor in Mobico, and Gemini Trains, chaired by Labour peer Lord Berkeley.
The ORR is expected to decide between the three applicants by the summer.
Virgin is already preparing to order a dozen high-speed trains that would operate through the Channel Tunnel, with the purchase likely to be worth more than £500m.
It is understood that the company is also close to finalising launch funding of around £800m in debt and equity from investors, including Sir Richard, though less might be required if it opts to lease rather than buy the trains.
Phil Whittingham, who is leading the rail project for Virgin, said the regulatory decision was 'really good news' as he confirmed plans to run the first trains in 2029.
The Campaign for Better Transport said that much of the Channel Tunnel's potential is currently untapped and that the ORR's announcement was a boost for travellers.
However, following the decision, Eurostar once again claimed there is not enough space at Temple Mills for two operators.
It said: 'The options presented in the report could help create some capacity, but this would not be enough to accommodate the stated ambitions of any single operator.'
Eurostar claims it uses more than six of the eight maintenance lanes each day on average, whereas the study commissioned by the ORR suggested that fewer than six were actually being used, leaving space for a new entrant.
Virgin said its trains will be 200 metres long and that, with each lane stretching for 400 metres, it could make do with only one and a half if necessary.
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This means the UK's inbound migration figures should take into account not just Australians and Canadians – for example – coming to the UK, but also Britons returning from Australia and Canada after their youth mobility visas expire. If it is assumed that everyone returns then over a longer time frame the youth mobility programmes will have a neutral impact on net immigration because every Briton who leaves the UK will come back and every non-Briton who comes to the UK will leave. This does not take into account the people – both Britons abroad and non-Britons in the UK – who apply for a different visa to stay in their adopted country. Do these conclusions also apply to the EU scheme? The impact on net migration of the potential EU scheme will depend on the details of the agreement between London and Brussels. Madeleine Sumption, director at the Migration Observatory, told the PA news agency that the size of the cap on the programme would be vital for the impact on net migration. She said the fact the UK sends more people to Australia, Canada and New Zealand than it receives from them 'probably results from the fact that the UK has a much larger population than they do, so we just have more young people potentially interested in moving'. With the EU scheme, Ms Sumption said, the population sizes are flipped – that is to say the EU's population is much bigger than the UK, leaving more young people who might be willing to come here. Therefore the smaller the cap on the number of visas is, the more likely both the EU and UK will fill their quotas. If both fill their quotas – and the quotas going both ways are the same – then the impact on net migration will be zero. However if the cap is large then it is more likely that there will not be as many Britons going to Europe as are coming in the opposite direction, which will bring up net migration. But, as with the existing schemes, both Britons in Europe and Europeans in the UK will eventually have to leave unless they find another visa, which over the long run should mean that the programme has a neutral impact on net migration. BBC – Today, 19/05/2025 Migration Observatory – What is the Youth Mobility Scheme and how does it work? (archived) – Entry clearance visas granted outside the UK (archived page and spreadsheet, using tab Data_Vis_D02) Australian Department of Home Affairs – Visitor visa statistics (archived) Australian Department of Home Affairs – Working Holiday Maker visa program report (archived) New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment – Migration data explorer (archived page and downloaded spreadsheet. To download the correct spreadsheet, instructions can be found at (archived): In dataset select 'W1 work decisions', in time period select 'calendar year' and in variables select 'application substream', 'application criteria' and 'decision type') Canadian data provided to PA news agency (archived) Madeleine Sumption profile (archived)