Revealed: Secret high-speed rail plan backs Newcastle, Sydney, Wollongong link - SMH  Michael Koziol   Dec 24, 2022

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A review of high-speed rail options for NSW, which the state government has kept secret for nearly three years, recommends prioritising a fast rail link between Newcastle, Sydney and Wollongong at speeds up to 250km/h.

But the strategy, which was commissioned by Gladys Berejiklian, casts doubt on the need for high-speed rail to the Central West and says a route to Goulburn and Canberra would be nice, but is not urgent.

Then premier Gladys Berejiklian with Professor Andrew McNaughton and then transport minister Andrew Constance, announcing the review in 2018.

Then premier Gladys Berejiklian with Professor Andrew McNaughton and then transport minister Andrew Constance, announcing the review in 2018.

Led by UK-based Professor Andrew McNaughton, the strategy canvassed four routes for faster rail nominated by the government: south to Wollongong and Nowra, north to Newcastle and the Hunter, west to Bathurst, Orange and Parkes, and south-west to Goulburn and Canberra.

The paper has never been released publicly and the Herald has not obtained a copy. However, in an interview McNaughton, who is chair of the UK’s Network Rail High Speed and a former technical adviser to the country’s HS2 rail scheme, said his research had established that linking Newcastle and Wollongong to Sydney by fast rail would “change the face of NSW”.

Such a project would require new track, he said, with tunnels under suburban Sydney. The aim was to put Newcastle and Sydney within an hour of each other, which would mean speeds of up to 250km/h. “You go as fast as you need to, not as fast as you can,” he said.

“In my book, you’ve got to fix the corridor between Sydney and the Hunter. That [would make] the biggest difference to the biggest number of people.”  Andrew McNaughton

McNaughton said the Goulburn and Canberra route would “make a difference” but should not be a top priority, while to the west, “people just need a decent train service”. This could be achieved through selective track upgrades at a fairly modest cost.

McNaughton said Wollongong was also “a city which could be much, much more” than it is right now, and the whole south coast would be transformed by high-speed rail.

Berejiklian commissioned the review in late 2018. A frustrated McNaughton said his report had been accepted by Berejiklian and was due to be released when she resigned as premier in 2021. He said the NSW government then asked him to record a launch video a few months ago, but it had also never seen the light of day.

“I don’t know where it stands now,” McNaughton said. “It can’t be a [political] football every four years. It’s got to be something which everybody says is a fundamental part of the future of the country.”

The government refused to release the report on Friday, but Cities Minister, Rob Stokes, told the Herald that McNaughton’s advice had been “invaluable” in progressing the government’s rail vision.

“The recommendations of his work are demonstrated in our six cities plan to better connect the cities of metropolitan NSW,” Stokes said.

Stokes has also written to federal Infrastructure Minister, Catherine King, asking the newly created High Speed Rail Authority to work with the NSW Greater Cities Commission on planning, land use, job creation and place-making opportunities around new and upgraded rail corridors.

The Greater Cities Commission shows the four potential routes as grey lines marked “fast rail network investigation”.

The Greater Cities Commission shows the four potential routes as grey lines marked “fast rail network investigation”.

The NSW and federal governments have already pledged a combined $1 billion for track upgrades north of Sydney, which they pitched as a first step towards a high-speed rail future.

McNaughton acknowledged the potential to eventually connect Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane by high-speed rail, but said the priority should be to “link Sydney with itself, [and] with NSW”. He did not put a price tag on the project but said: “For an economy which is one of the richest economies in the world, it ought to be affordable.”

McNaughton said the northern line could be built to accommodate a future high-speed rail link to Brisbane and the Gold Coast.

“Getting out of Sydney is never going to be more than 250km/h. It’s all going to be in tunnels,” he said. “Once you’re clear of the Hawkesbury, if you were building with an eye to a bigger future, you line it up a bit faster. It doesn’t mean you have to run it faster.”

But it was not possible to simply upgrade the existing track, McNaughton said. “It’s a lovely piece of Victorian [era] engineering, but it’s basically useless.”

The four routes canvassed by McNaughton at the government’s request appear as grey lines on the Greater Cities Commission’s map of the six cities region, marked “fast rail network investigation”.

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The commission’s discussion paper said: “Fast rail has the potential to be among the most important ‘region shapers’, transforming settlement, jobs and enabling a truly polycentric city region.”

Addressing cynics at a conference earlier this month, Greater Cities chief commissioner Geoff Roberts said Western Sydney Airport was announced 13 times before construction eventually began, and high-speed rail had so far been announced 11 times, so it would not be long until “we will actually start this damn thing”.

“It’s not about the railway line,” Roberts said. “The railway line is the facilitator of human beings, enterprise and change.”

Michael Koziol is Sydney Editor of The Sydney Morning Herald, based in our Sydney newsroom. He was previously deputy editor of The Sun-Herald and a federal political reporter in Canberra.Connect via Twitter.

 

 

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