Rail Regulator orders
HS1 Ltd to further lower charges for train
operators
The Office of Rail and
Road announced today that it is directing HS1 Ltd to lower its
charges for passenger and freight train operating companies to use
the high speed rail line from London to the Channel Tunnel, from
April 2025.
The regulator's
decision, published in its Final Determination of HS1 Ltd's
spending plans for the next five years, follows a thorough review
of the company's proposals, which had already proposed some
reductions in costs relative to today.
The regulator has
determined that overall charges should come down by 3.8% (£5m per
year) compared to HS1 Ltd's latest plans, which were published in
November as a response to the regulator's Draft Determination in
September. As part of this, the company is being directed to reduce
its charges for renewing its track assets and its stations,
including St Pancras. It must also reduce its charges for its
day-to-day operating and maintenance of the railway.
ORR was able to
identify specific areas in the company's spending plans where
further improvements can be made, resulting in savings to passenger
and freight train operators. ORR's view is that better management
of the track and station assets can result in lower charges,
ultimately benefiting customers.
In its response to the
Draft Determination, HS1 Ltd disagreed with the amount of ORR's
proposed reductions in charges. The regulator took additional
evidence from HS1 Ltd and other stakeholders into account, but
ultimately determined that the company's spending plans did not
meet its duties for efficient spending.
Feras Alshaker,
director, planning and performance, said: "Our thorough,
independent review of HS1 Ltd's spending plans has resulted in
significantly lower costs for passenger and freight train operators
using the high speed line from April 2025. Although, overall, HS1's
original plans were good, the company must now change specific
areas of those plans to account for our decisions, which should
benefit everyone who uses this railway."
Notes to
editor
1.
ORR's PR24 Final
Determination
2.
Regulated charges - comparison between last control period, HS1's
latest plans and ORR's final
determination:
£m / year (Feb 2023
prices)
|
Last control period
(CP3)
|
HS1 Ltd's latest
plans
|
ORR Final
Determination
|
Change from CP3 to
FD
|
Route Operations &
Maintenance
|
95.8
|
92.4
|
90.1
|
-5.9%
|
Route
renewals
|
34
|
29.9
|
28.1
|
-17.4%
|
Stations
renewals
|
11.6
|
9.3
|
8.5
|
-26.7%
|
Total regulated
income
|
141.4
|
131.6
|
126.7
|
-10.4%
|
3. ORR's
review found that HS1 Ltd's latest plans did not
meet its
General Duty under the HS1 Concession Agreement. As such, we are
instructing HS1 Ltd to make material changes in two key
areas:
a. Its
charges for renewals were not efficient and HS1 Ltd must reduce
them by £1.9m per year for the HS1 Route and £0.9m per year for
Stations;
b. Its
charges for operations & maintenance on the HS1 Route were not
efficient and HS1 Ltd must reduce them by £2.3m per
year.
4.
Passenger and freight operator growth
a. ORR's
determination assumes there will be no freight traffic on HS1 in
this control period, based on information provided by HS1 Ltd and
freight operators. However, we have determined the charges which
would apply to freight on HS1, and these charges are significantly
lower than in previous control periods, which we expect to support
the growth of freight.
b. While
ORR's determination is separate from decision on access to HS1, it
assumes long-term growth in passenger traffic, including the
introduction of new operators, and ORR hopes that its determination
of lower charges will support this growth.
5. About
the periodic review process:
a. The
periodic review 2024 (PR24) of HS1 Ltd covers funding for the
period from 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2030, also known as control
period four (CP4).
b. ORR
issued its Draft Determination on 30 September, followed by a
6-week consultation. In response, stakeholders provided feedback
and new evidence which supported ORR's approach and HS1 Ltd was
required to revise its plans to reflect the Draft Determination,
which it did not fully do. Where ORR found its plans were not
acceptable, it consulted stakeholders again from 12-19 December and
took any new evidence into account in developing its Final
Determination.
6. About
the HS1 Network:
a. The HS1
network is a 109km high-speed rail line that connects London St
Pancras through Kent to the Channel Tunnel.
b. There
are four stations on the line: London St Pancras, Stratford
International, Ebbsfleet International and Ashford
International.
c. The
network is used by domestic Southeastern 'Javelin' services between
London and Kent and within Kent; and Eurostar passenger trains, as
well as freight operations heading to and from the Channel
Tunnel.