MPs told that cost of dealing with protestors on project has topped 拢120m
An underground station at the Manchester terminus of HS2 was ruled out because it would have cost 拢5bn, transport bosses told MPs this week.
The idea had been backed by Manchester City Council leader Bev Craig and Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham but was kicked into touch by transport secretary Grant Shapps last month because of its eye-watering price tag.
The news was revealed as the project鈥檚 boss Mark Thurston revealed that the cost of dealing with protestors on the scheme could hit 拢200m by the time it is completed.
The Public Accounts Committee heard for the first time what the expected cost of building a new station underground in the middle of Manchester would have cost.
Clive Maxwell, director general of the High Speed Rail Group in the Department for Transport, said the proposal was too expensive to get off the ground.
He added: 鈥淚 think the estimates we had were up to 拢5bn extra for that station [at Piccadilly], so the department, ministers and the government took the view that that was not the right thing to do, and that instead a surface station with a turn-back facility should be used, allowing trains to go in one way and come back out the other way.鈥
He said the digging necessary to create station would have cost 鈥渧ery large sums of money鈥 and caused 鈥渉uge amounts of disruption in central Manchester鈥, adding that the benefit of leaving the surface free for alternative development outweighed the huge cost.
The committee was also told that HS2 expects to spend 拢200m, more than half of the money set to be spent on the new 拢370m Interchange station near Solihull, dealing with protestors by the time it is finished.
Thurston said: 鈥淲e are at about 拢122m spent to date, all up, in terms of the impact of protestors. Our forecast is that that will probably be somewhere between 拢150m and 拢200m by the time we are finished.鈥
He told MPs the scheme was buying up more land than it need to so it could create an exclusion zone around its sites. He added: 鈥淲e have become, I guess, more sophisticated ourselves in trying to deal with this, with things like taking slightly more land than we might otherwise need to make sure that the protestors do not get close to our sites. We have seen tunnels and structures and other things get constructed - very unsafely, frankly - as well as some of the behaviour we have had to put up with.鈥
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Thurston said the project had been able to absorb the cost of the pandemic within its 拢9.9bn contingency provision.
Committee chair Meg Hillier said the contingency drawdown had increased by 拢500m since the previous update but Thurston said a 鈥渕ore lumpy鈥 draw on contingency was to be expected in the early stages of the project.
Maxwell added later: 鈥淭he big bulk of work at this stage is around the main works civils and the mobilisation of those.
鈥淭hat is the most expensive part of the programme in many ways, so you might expect a disproportionate amount of contingency to be drawn relative to that.鈥
Thurston said contingency costs relating to the pandemic amounted to between 拢100m and 拢150m, with a further 拢400m of indirect costs on top.
Thurston said their forecasts suggested they could deliver the project within the currently allotted contingency funding and added that HS2 Ltd did 鈥渁 lot of work with our supply chain to find efficiencies and other cost-saving opportunities鈥 to offset emerging cost pressures.
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