First HS2 trains won’t leave until 2036 after costs balloon to £107,000,000,000

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The HS2 saga continues after the government confirmed that the project will be delayed again while projected costs have increased.

The high-speed railway has been designed to make rail journeys quicker and smoother between London and destinations in the West Midlands, andoriginally, the North.

But it has been plagued by delays, cost issues and the scrapping of the nothern leg.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander revealed in the Commons today that trains are not able to depart before 2036, casting aside the earlier estimate of 2033.

Concept art of a HS2 train.
The HS2 project has been marred by issues, and now it faces another delay (Picture: HS2 )

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Meanwhile, the costs of the megaproject are reaching eyewatering amounts, with projected estimates now between £87.7 and £102.7 billion.

A chunk of the increased costs, around two-thirds, is due to works being missed, underestimates and inefficient delivery, the Transport Secretary said. The rest was due to inflation which wasn’t factored in regularly enough by previous Conservative governments, she added.

She hit out at the previous governments, accusing them of wasting taxpayer money.

A graphics map showing the HS2 route and the cancelled northern leg.
A map shows the confirmed HS2 route to Birmingham and the cancelled northern leg (Picture: Metro)

The northern legs to Manchester via Crewe, and to Leeds, were axed by former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in 2023.

Alexander said the previous governments have created a ‘slow motion car crash.’

‘If this seems like an obscene increase in time and cost, it is,’ she said, adding that she is ‘angry’ on behalf of taxpayers, passengers and those working on the railways.

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MPs lambasted the project in Commons today, saying their constituents in areas with construction have faced disruption for years, including traffic nightmares due to road closures during construction, while some landowners are still waiting for payments for purchased land.

Transport Secretary said: ‘Taxpayers, passengers and communities along the route have been let down by years of mismanagement on HS2. 

Construction continues on a section of tunnelling along the HS2 railway in Wendover, Britain, May 10, 2026.
Construction of the Chiltern Tunnel section of HS2 in Wendover, one of the longest tunnels on the high-speed rail route (Picture: Reuters)

‘I share their anger about the waste and mess, but I am proud that this Government has worked with HS2’s new senior team to get this project off life support and on the road to recovery.  

‘We will get the job done but we will also take every opportunity to save time and money in the process, getting a grip on delivery, controlling costs, and stripping out the complexity that’s plagued the project in the past. 

‘We can and must build big infrastructure projects in Britain. But we also need competent people in charge of them. This is the same team that delivered the Elizabeth Line. We have done it before, we will do it again.’ 

Cancelling the entire project is not an option, Alexander suggested.

She said scrapping the project entirely would cost nearly as much as finishing it, and would leave unfinished ‘relics’ strewn across the UK countryside.

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