Changes to rail electrification plans a 'slap in face'

PA train on Tyne BridgePA
The Liverpool-Newcastle link was to be fully electrified, according to the previous government

The railway route between Liverpool and Newcastle may not be fully electrified despite a promise by the previous government.

In 2015, the Department for Transport said electrification of the whole link - which goes through Manchester, Leeds and York - would be complete by 2022.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling has since said electrification will instead be used "where it makes a difference".

Shadow rail minister Rachael Maskell has called it "a slap in the face".

In an interview with the Daily Telegraph, Mr Grayling said: "We are not abandoning electrification, what we are doing is using electrification where it makes a difference.

"What we've got on the railways is technology we didn't have five or six years ago."

He said the use of bi-mode trains, which can travel on both electrified and non-electrified sections of a track, meant there were "places on the network you don't actually need to start digging everything up and putting in place overhead cables".

Getty Images commuters at rail stationGetty Images
The upgrade of the Leeds-Manchester link is seen as integral to boosting the northern economy

The project to electrify the route between Manchester and Leeds was announced in 2011 as part of the then chancellor George Osborne's ambition to create a northern economic "powerhouse".

The government said it would deliver more passenger capacity and shorten journey times.

However, the electrification was controversially paused in 2015 when a review into its costs and plans was carried out.

'Broken promise'

Speaking about this latest development, Ms Maskell said: "This is a slap in the face for the commuters and businesses in the North, including those in my constituency of York Central.

"Just six weeks ago the Tories promised the electrification of the TransPennine route as an integral part of the government's 'Northern Powerhouse'."

In an open letter to Mr Grayling, Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham said the north had "put up with second-class transport for too long".

He said the possible changes "would represent a major broken promise... and the derailment of the Northern Powerhouse".

Getty Images Steve rotheram and Andy burnhamGetty Images
Steve Rotheram and Andy Burnham, mayors of Liverpool City Region and Greater Manchester, have long campaigned for better rail links

Mr Grayling's announcement comes days after the government scrapped the planned electrification of three railway lines.

They included the routes between Cardiff and Swansea; between Windermere and Oxenholme in the Lake District; and between Kettering, Nottingham and Sheffield.

A Department for Transport spokesman said: "We are investing around £40 billion in our network as part of the biggest rail modernisation programme for over a century to provide faster journeys and more comfortable trains.

"This includes delivering improved journeys for passengers right across the North."