Northern England and Scotland, the areas where the inventors and builders of such things came from, are to get a "World Class" rail network. Some of it, a tiny part of its thousands of miles of track, will get to run on that electricity stuff. Over time we wil get a share of 500 new carriages, but nothing is said about what will pull them. We already know the our reasonable TransPennine trains are going south to be replace by refurbished stock moving north. The whole thing is going to cot £1.2bn. Aren't we the lucky ones? Are we impressed?
No we are not, not when London is getting one new line of 85 miles in length with 40 new stations and 1,500 brand new carriages and trains at a cost of £30bn+.
Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin says the scheme will bridge the north/south divide. I suggest Patrick goes back to primary school for a few arithmetic lessons. The numbers above are not bridging the gap, they are widening it.