HS2

17.11.15

HS2 rolling stock tender to be open to all and ‘fiercely competitive’

The tender process for HS2’s two types of rolling stock will be an open competition, Simon Kirby, chief executive of HS2 Ltd, confirmed at RTM’s recent TransCityRail North event

He reiterated that the rolling stock for HS2 will comprise both a classic-compatible and a captive fleet, with both types of train to be 200m long. But as noted in HS2’s Rolling Stock Depot and Stabling Strategy, on some services, two trains will be coupled to provide a 400m train with up to 1,100 seats. 

It is expected that about 60 of the 200m trains will be needed to operate the phase 1 passenger services, with approximately three-quarters of these being classic compatible trains and the remainder being captive, HS2-only trains. 

“I truly believe it should be an open competition,” said Kirby, answering an audience question from a representative from the state-owned China Railway Rolling Stock Corporation. 

Kirby said: “Whether the rolling stock comes from China, Sunderland, France, or wherever, we can’t specify it will be built in the UK. But our tender will be focused around heavily using the UK supply chain and UK jobs.” 

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Kirby added HS2 will be looking for “innovative ideas” from the market when the fleet starts to be procured in just over a year’s time. 

Richard Westcott, the BBC’s transport correspondent and host for the evening, asked whether Kirby worried about how it will play in the media, when contracts are given to foreign companies. “All the time,” was the reply. 

But, Kirby asked rhetorically, what exactly is a British company? “For me, it is about creating British jobs and getting value in this country,” he said. “I mean, Hitachi is just building a new factory in Sunderland [sic – the factory is in Newton Aycliffe], and Bombardier in Derby is certainly not a ‘British company’, but there are a lot of British jobs there producing great products. 

“For me it is about British economy, British wealth. Not who the parent company is.” 

On the open competition element, Nick Hughes (pictured), sales director at Hitachi Rail Europe, said that in the end, “the best bid will win”. He added that he believes the process will be “fiercely” competitive and all the major manufacturers, including the Chinese, will bid for this. 

12-11-15-416

“I think it is the largest rolling stock order in anyone’s pipeline over the next five to 10 years,” said Hughes. “But you have to win it: you have to have the right product, the right price, the right schedule.” 

According to HS2, the 'classic compatible' train fleet will have the same capability as the captive fleet when it comes to speed, acceleration and passenger capacity, but will be slightly smaller (in width and height) to allow them to operate on the existing UK rail network beyond the new phase 1 line, to destinations such as Liverpool, Manchester and Glasgow. 

HS2 rolling stock costs

Click on the image to enlarge. 'OB' refers to 'optimism bias'.

Duncan Sutherland, non-executive director at HS2 Ltd, recently spoke to RTM about how classic-compatible services will boost economic growth, while Alstom’s HS2 director Henrik Anderberg told us his company would base its manufacturing in the UK if it won the HS2 rolling stock tender. Sutherland and Anderberg were among the nearly 600 guests at the TransCityRail North event, held on 12 November at Manchester’s Palace Hotel. 

In late September, the chancellor, George Osborne, while on a trip to China announced that the bidding process for seven HS2 engineering contracts had started. The seven contracts, which will have a total combined value of £11.8bn, will form part of the first phase of construction works on the London-Birmingham route, set to start in 2017. 

Comments

Mikeyb   18/11/2015 at 11:59

Ordering two separate types of train for HS2 (captive and classic compatible) is undoubtedly going to greatly increase the overall cost. Surely it would be more cost effective to order one large fleet of classic compatibles that will be able to operate anywhere. It would not look good if there was a future problem, whereby HS2 was closed for a period and the captive fleet was lying idle unable to be used,

RTM   18/11/2015 at 12:50

We've had the same thought before Mikey, but HS2's leaders are convinced two fleets is the way forward - and we know from conversations how much thought they've given this. Plus, there's this from the 2012 cost model report (available online): "Captive sets operating on HS2 can be procured as an “off the-shelf” item, as they are analogous to existing European high speed trains. Classic compatible sets that operate along HS2 and then on to the classic network must be of a smaller gauge, requiring adaptation of a European high speed train design and a customised assembly. We have included a significant cost premium as a result for these sets."

RTM   18/11/2015 at 12:58

Economic case in 2013 said each classic-compatible 200m set would cost £4m to £6m each more than each 200m captive set, plus classic-compatibles have a one-off 'design cost' for the whole fleet of roughly £420m-£840m. So, 81 captive sets x an extra £4m-£6m to make each a classic-compatible... you can see it would cost an extra few hundred million to go fully classic-compatible, on top of the other issues. Though as you say, doubtless some other efficiencies would arise from having a standardised fleet.

Huguenot   20/11/2015 at 17:21

HS2 is right to specify both captive and classic-compatible types. At Stage 2, more captive sets will be required but not more classic-compatibles. Also it does provide the opportunity for separate suppliers of the two types, with the hope that at least one will be built in the UK. There was a suggestion that the captive sets would have 3+2 seating. Despite their extra width, HS2 must not proceed with this idea. People hate sitting the the middle seat of a row of 3, even on continental gauge: don't do it!

John   22/11/2015 at 20:58

George Osborne won't be able to stop himself interfering with this process - Chinese Trainsets, here we come!! - Plus rocketing costs!

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