Amid all of this, the organisation has committed to make cost savings of £3.9bn. Bosses have been clear about the financial pressures they face.
“Like many businesses, we continue to feel the impact of inflation and rising supply chain costs,” Andrew Haines, Network Rail’s then-chief executive said in an update this summer.
This means “tough choices”, including “prioritising assets that are located on busier parts of the network,” he said.
But the regulator, the Office of Rail and Road, has warned that constrained funding forcing Network Rail to spend “less on renewals and more on life-extending repairs and maintenance” could mean “more asset failures and therefore disruption to train services in the long-term”, plus potential higher costs in the future.
Of course, for millions of passengers this Christmas, their main priority will simply be getting home. People are being warned to check and plan ahead before they travel – a message as reliably present at this time of year as Christmas trees or mulled wine.
So, can railway passengers around the country expect a smoother Christmas next year?
Unlikely, argues Jake Kelly of Network Rail. A project like Hanslope Junction near Milton Keynes can be years in the planning.
With “a pipeline that is three or four years long”, he says “we’re already starting to finalise [plans] for next year”.
Additional reporting: Florence Freeman.
Top image credit: Getty Images.
