HS2 bill could rise to £102bn with first trains delayed until 2039, government admits
Transport secretary Heidi Alexander blames Conservative government for ‘obscene increase in times and costs’
Editorial perspective
AI-assisted
Britain's flagship infrastructure project faces a sobering reckoning. The revised HS2 cost estimate of £102 billion represents a staggering escalation from initial projections, while pushing commercial operations back to 2039 transforms what was meant to be transformative infrastructure into a project that won't deliver economic benefits for another 15 years.
For investors and policymakers, this exemplifies the risks endemic to major public works: scope creep, political interference, and inadequate project management can turn strategic investments into fiscal albatrosses. The delay compounds Britain's productivity challenges at precisely the moment when infrastructure quality increasingly determines competitive advantage among developed economies.
More broadly, HS2's troubles raise questions about the UK's capacity to execute complex capital projects and maintain investor confidence in government-backed initiatives. The episode also highlights how political transitions can expose hidden costs in long-duration projects, creating uncertainty for construction firms, bondholders, and regional economies counting on promised connectivity improvements.
Originally reported by Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent
for The Guardian
Processing your unsubscribe…
Hang on a moment.
You've been unsubscribed.
You won't receive any more marketing messages from Test. Updates take effect within 24 hours.
That link has expired.
The unsubscribe link is no longer valid. You can opt out manually instead.
Editorial perspective
AI-assistedBritain's flagship infrastructure project faces a sobering reckoning. The revised HS2 cost estimate of £102 billion represents a staggering escalation from initial projections, while pushing commercial operations back to 2039 transforms what was meant to be transformative infrastructure into a project that won't deliver economic benefits for another 15 years.
For investors and policymakers, this exemplifies the risks endemic to major public works: scope creep, political interference, and inadequate project management can turn strategic investments into fiscal albatrosses. The delay compounds Britain's productivity challenges at precisely the moment when infrastructure quality increasingly determines competitive advantage among developed economies.
More broadly, HS2's troubles raise questions about the UK's capacity to execute complex capital projects and maintain investor confidence in government-backed initiatives. The episode also highlights how political transitions can expose hidden costs in long-duration projects, creating uncertainty for construction firms, bondholders, and regional economies counting on promised connectivity improvements.