The case for the high speed rail line was heavily dependent on a projected increase in business travel

The case for a complete rethink of public transport priorities in the aftermath of Covid-19 – including a fresh look at arguments for and against the HS2 high speed rail line – is to be the subject of a major parliamentary inquiry beginning this week.

The pandemic has led to a dramatic fall in commuting into towns and cities, as well as a national financial crisis highlighted last Wednesday by the chancellor Rishi Sunak in his spending review. Pressure to reduce carbon emissions is also raising questions about the desirability of the £27bn road-building programme.

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

My mother failed to protect me from sexual abuse as a child

After counselling you may feel strong enough to let your mum back…

Blue Jays vs Red Sox

Teoscar Hernandez

UK faces ‘significant risks’ to quality of food imported post-Brexit, says report

Better controls on EU goods needed as impact of Covid and Russia-Ukraine…

UK agrees to negotiate with Mauritius over handover of Chagos Islands

Foreign secretary indicates major reversal of policy that could allow return of…