The target opening date for the Borders railway project in Scotland
has been put back to 2013. Construction is not now expected to begin
until 2010.
Transport Minister Stewart Stevenson told the Scottish Parliament on
March 5th that the government intends to procure the line from
Edinburgh - Tweedbank using a non profit distributing vehicle basis.
He
said: "As part of the project development and strategy, several
procurement routes were reviewed and a decision has been made to take
forward this procurement using a non-profit distributing vehicle. The
use of NPD models for railways is already well established. For
example, the financial structure of Network Rail."
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"The details
of our financial approach will be developed by Transport Scotland in
conjunction with the Financial Partnerships Unit and Partnerships UK
having taken full account of market soundings and the need for a
competitive procurement process."
Mr Stevenson revealed that
costs associated with the 35 miles route re-instatement have risen
significantly since it was estimated by the previous administration at
£130M at 2002 prices which is equivalent to £175 - £185M at 2012 prices.
"I
will not provide an exact cost as a headline number would prejudice
commercial negotiations but l can indicate that , at this stage in the
development of the project, capital costs are indicated to be in the
range of £235 - £295M," he said.
The cost increases are primarily
associated with the rise in land and property prices in the Scottish
Borders, partly driven by the expectation of the rail connection to
Edinburgh's growing financial services sector. There will be six
intermediate stations. Outline design work in in progress. Mr Stevenson
said that, following detailed assessment by Transport Scotland, the
Benefit Cost Ratio had risen from 1.21 to 1.32.
Last year
Transport Scotland took over the authorised undertaker role for the
project from the Waverley Rail Partnership but the three local
authorities in that partnership, Scottish Borders Council, Midlothian
Council and Edinburgh CC, are still key stakeholders.
It is
envisaged that the project capital borrowings from the financial
markets will be re-paid over asset life by the financial contributions
from the local authorities and by annual service charges met from
Transport Scotland budgets.
The earlier time scale for the
scheme, which envisaged proceeding with a design and build contract,
was to begin on site in 2009 with completion by the end of 2011.
Source : NCE