The Scottish Borders Council said that around 22 per cent more travellers than anticipated
The first year of Britain’s newest railway has been characterised by delays and disruption – blamed largely on poor planning for the £300m line.
Trains started running on the Borders Railway, which extends for 35 miles from Tweedbank to Edinburgh, on 6 September 2015.
Three days later, the Queen officially opened the line, on the day she became Britain’s longest-serving monarch. But Britain’s shortest-serving railway has had an annus horribilis ever since.
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Even during the best week’s performance, in March, fewer than half the trains arrived on time at Waverley station in the Scottish capital. In the worst week, in December 2015, only one in eight trains arrived punctually in Edinburgh.
On more than half the days, at least one train has been cancelled, with one in six services axed during a week in early July.
The research was carried out by a campaigner for the line, Bill Jamieson. He has monitored the service from October until this week.
According to his data, the main cause of serious disruption – on 18 days – is failures by the train stock used, known as Class 158. During warm weather, when delivering full power on steep climbs, one engine can shut down due to overheating.
“It’s not as though we’ve had a warm summer here,” said Mr Jamieson. “The units were, if not failing, at least having serious problems at Falahill Summit, the highest point on the line.”
Banners in Edinburgh announce the opening
Nine days of serious disruption are blamed on signalling failures. Andrew Roden of Rail magazine believes that the main cause is water leaking into the axle counters, which relay information about trains passing. He said: “A fault with a telecommunications link was also amplified when the automated fault-finding system that should detect the locations [of the failure] also failed.”
Most of the line is single-track. As a result, a small issue can quickly trigger significant disruption. The original Carlisle-Edinburgh line was double-track throughout. It closed on the recommendation of the Beeching report in 1969, leaving the Borders as the only region of Britain without a rail service.
The issues have been exacerbated by the unexpectedly high numbers of travellers on the route, making “dwell time” on the platform longer than planned. Despite the poor timekeeping, many more passengers have used the line than were predicted during the planning process.
The Scottish Borders Council said that demand at Galashiels and Tweedbank stations had exceeded expectations by more than 600 per cent. Overall, around 22 per cent more travellers than anticipated are using the line.
David Spaven, a railway consultant and campaigner, said: “The largely single-track Borders Railway has proved to be a classic penny-wise, pound-foolish project.
“Ludicrously pessimistic traffic forecasts for the three Borders stations contributed to a supposedly poor ‘business case’ which in turn led to Transport Scotland cutting back the double-track requirement for the railway from 16 miles to just 9.5 miles. We are now reaping the whirlwind in terms of unreliability.”
British rail travel through the ages
Show all 30
British rail travel through the ages
1/30 1875
The general view of St Pancras station in London
2/30 1880
The locomotive which plunged off the Tay Rail Bridge into the Firth of Tay after its recovery from the estuary. The disaster occurred when a section collapsed during a storm in 1879 and 75 passengers were killed
3/30 1885
An East Coast Express train at King's Cross Great Northern Railway, London
4/30 1890
A porter directing a passenger on the platform of a station on the outskirts of Liverpool
5/30 1900
Passengers sitting in the observation car on the Llandudno to Llanberis line in Wales
6/30 1910
A London and North Western Railway worker in the slip-coach of a train, which detaches at a station that the rest of the train is not stopping at
7/30 1914
French people leaving Victoria Station in London on the boat train to Paris, at the start of World War I
8/30 1916
A female guard on the Metropolitan railway with her emergency lantern
9/30 1925
Holiday crowds at King's Cross railway station, London
Getty Images
10/30 1928
A young Easter holiday maker tries to reach up to the ticket office window to buy his ticket
11/30 1928
The luxurious first class lounge on board a London Midland and Scottish Royal Scot train. Known as the travelling hotel the train has a lounge, bar and private boudoir
12/30 1929
Two young women pushing their luggage on a trolley at Paddington station during the holiday rush out of London
13/30 1930
A worker sitting astride a locomotive whilst cleaning the boiler
14/30 1930
A third class Southern Railway carriage being hoisted at Southampton Docks in Hampshire
15/30 1930
The Bennie railplane being demonstrated at Glasgow, Scotland. It consisted of self-propelled passenger cars driven by air screws, suspended from a steel girder
16/30 1930
Seven of the new King Class steam locomotives
Getty Images
17/30 1930
Passengers on the Bennie Railplane in Glasgow; the inventor George Bennie stands at the end of the carriage
18/30 1930
Port of London Authority workers unloading a shipment of bananas from a train
19/30 1931
London and North-Eastern Railway petrol train in Yorkshire
20/30 1931
Railway workers turning the LNER 'Hush Hush' locomotive No. 100000 on a manually operated turntable while a man films the operation with a hand cranked camera
21/30 1931
On the Great Western Railway, a film crew film the automatical train control in action
22/30 1931
Racing driver Lord Howe driving his Mercedes sports car onto the float at Dover, ready to be hoisted on board the Southern Railway's cross-channel steamer 'Autocarrier'
23/30 1933
Passengers making enquiries at one of the new Southern Railway information points on Waterloo concourse
24/30 1933
Fireman Blackett of the LMS railway saying farewell to his workmates and officials at Carlisle before finishing duty. He was off to America to assist on the Royal Scot which is touring the USA after appearing at the Chicago World Fair
25/30 1935
A steam train crossing the Darwood Viaduct, Cornwall
26/30 1937
A group of schoolboys examining a streamlined Coronation Class locomotive of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) at Euston Station
Getty Images
27/30 1938
A member of the Berkhampstead Riding School tests her riding prowess against the Carlisle Express in a field that adjoins the LMS railway at Tring, Hertfordshire
28/30 1956
Women seeing off loved ones on a troop train at Woolwich railway station in south London. The men, of the Royal Artillery, are bound for Salisbury Plain for retraining because of the Suez crisis
29/30 1968
The 'Flying Scotsman' steam locomotive leaves a station to travel to Edinburgh
Getty Images
30/30 1972
The Brighton Belle train leaving Victoria Station, central London
1/30 1875
The general view of St Pancras station in London
2/30 1880
The locomotive which plunged off the Tay Rail Bridge into the Firth of Tay after its recovery from the estuary. The disaster occurred when a section collapsed during a storm in 1879 and 75 passengers were killed
3/30 1885
An East Coast Express train at King's Cross Great Northern Railway, London
4/30 1890
A porter directing a passenger on the platform of a station on the outskirts of Liverpool
5/30 1900
Passengers sitting in the observation car on the Llandudno to Llanberis line in Wales
6/30 1910
A London and North Western Railway worker in the slip-coach of a train, which detaches at a station that the rest of the train is not stopping at
7/30 1914
French people leaving Victoria Station in London on the boat train to Paris, at the start of World War I
8/30 1916
A female guard on the Metropolitan railway with her emergency lantern
9/30 1925
Holiday crowds at King's Cross railway station, London
Getty Images
10/30 1928
A young Easter holiday maker tries to reach up to the ticket office window to buy his ticket
11/30 1928
The luxurious first class lounge on board a London Midland and Scottish Royal Scot train. Known as the travelling hotel the train has a lounge, bar and private boudoir
12/30 1929
Two young women pushing their luggage on a trolley at Paddington station during the holiday rush out of London
13/30 1930
A worker sitting astride a locomotive whilst cleaning the boiler
14/30 1930
A third class Southern Railway carriage being hoisted at Southampton Docks in Hampshire
15/30 1930
The Bennie railplane being demonstrated at Glasgow, Scotland. It consisted of self-propelled passenger cars driven by air screws, suspended from a steel girder
16/30 1930
Seven of the new King Class steam locomotives
Getty Images
17/30 1930
Passengers on the Bennie Railplane in Glasgow; the inventor George Bennie stands at the end of the carriage
18/30 1930
Port of London Authority workers unloading a shipment of bananas from a train
19/30 1931
London and North-Eastern Railway petrol train in Yorkshire
20/30 1931
Railway workers turning the LNER 'Hush Hush' locomotive No. 100000 on a manually operated turntable while a man films the operation with a hand cranked camera
21/30 1931
On the Great Western Railway, a film crew film the automatical train control in action
22/30 1931
Racing driver Lord Howe driving his Mercedes sports car onto the float at Dover, ready to be hoisted on board the Southern Railway's cross-channel steamer 'Autocarrier'
23/30 1933
Passengers making enquiries at one of the new Southern Railway information points on Waterloo concourse
24/30 1933
Fireman Blackett of the LMS railway saying farewell to his workmates and officials at Carlisle before finishing duty. He was off to America to assist on the Royal Scot which is touring the USA after appearing at the Chicago World Fair
25/30 1935
A steam train crossing the Darwood Viaduct, Cornwall
26/30 1937
A group of schoolboys examining a streamlined Coronation Class locomotive of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway (LMS) at Euston Station
Getty Images
27/30 1938
A member of the Berkhampstead Riding School tests her riding prowess against the Carlisle Express in a field that adjoins the LMS railway at Tring, Hertfordshire
28/30 1956
Women seeing off loved ones on a troop train at Woolwich railway station in south London. The men, of the Royal Artillery, are bound for Salisbury Plain for retraining because of the Suez crisis
29/30 1968
The 'Flying Scotsman' steam locomotive leaves a station to travel to Edinburgh
Getty Images
30/30 1972
The Brighton Belle train leaving Victoria Station, central London
Mr Spaven, who is the author of Waverley Route: the battle for the Borders Railway, is demanding an inquiry to identify “exactly why we ended up with such a sub-optimal railway specification, based on hopelessly inadequate patronage forecasts.”
The familiar problem of staff shortage is blamed for severe disruption on 14 days. To run the full schedule requires train crews to work overtime, and fewer than expected have volunteered. In addition, staff sickness has been higher than anticipated.
A spokesperson for ScotRail Alliance said, “Borders Railway has been an extraordinary success. We are now providing people with an alternative way of travelling to work, to visit friends and family and to use for leisure.
“There have been some challenges and we’re determined to find the solutions that overcome them and see even more customers travelling on the line in year two and beyond.”
A scoping exercise is exploring the prospect of extending the Borders Railway to Carlisle, where it would join the West Coast main line. It would resurrect the entire line, and create the most direct link between Edinburgh and London.
Councillor David Parker, leader of Scottish Borders Council, said the passenger figures would “provide a boost to the business case for extending the line to Carlisle.”
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