High speed rail
Background
In August 2010, the Australian Government committed to a strategic study on the implementation of high speed rail (HSR) on the east coast of Australia—Moving forward with high speed rail. The Terms of Reference for the study were released by the Hon Anthony Albanese MP, Minister for Infrastructure and Transport on 31 October 2010.
The study, managed by the Department of Infrastructure and Transport, was established to inform the Australian Government, the ACT and state governments' consideration of next steps for high speed rail in Australia. The study was undertaken in two phases.
The Phase 1 report was launched by the Minister, on 4 August 2011. The report identified corridors and station locations and potential patronage, as well as providing an indicative estimate of the cost to build an HSR network.
Phase 2
Work on phase 2 of the study commenced in late 2011 and culminated in the release of the High speed rail study phase 2 report on 11 April 2013.
The phase 2 study built on the work of phase 1, but was considerably broader and deeper in objectives and scope, and refined many of the phase 1 estimates; particularly the demand and cost estimates.
Minister Albanese launched the report from phase 2 of the study on 11 April 2013.
- Minister's speech: Release of Phase 2 of the High speed rail feasibility study
- Media release
- Transcript of press conference
The report found that:
- The HSR network would comprise approximately 1,748 kilometres of dedicated route between Brisbane-Sydney-Canberra-Melbourne.
- The preferred alignment includes four capital city stations, four city-peripheral stations, and stations at the Gold Coast, Casino, Grafton, Coffs Harbour, Port Macquarie, Taree, Newcastle, the Central Coast, Southern Highlands, Wagga Wagga, Albury-Wodonga and Shepparton.
- Once fully operational (from 2065), HSR could carry approximately 84 million passengers each year, with express journey times of less than three hours between Melbourne-Sydney and Sydney-Brisbane.
- The optimal staging for the HSR program would involve building the Sydney-Melbourne line first, starting with the Sydney-Canberra sector. Subsequent stages would be Canberra-Melbourne, Newcastle-Sydney, Brisbane-Gold Coast and Gold Coast-Newcastle.
- The estimated cost of constructing the preferred HSR alignment in its entirety would be around $114 billion (in 2012 dollars).
- The HSR program and the majority of its individual stages are expected to produce only a small positive financial return on investment. Governments would be required to fund the majority of the upfront capital costs.
- If HSR passenger projections were met at the fare levels proposed, the HSR system, once operational, could generate sufficient fare revenue and other revenue to meet operating costs without ongoing public subsidy.
- HSR would substantially improve accessibility for the regional centres it served, and provide opportunity for—although not the automatic realisation of—regional development.
Report
The report is available to download in individual parts, or as the full report:
- Key findings and Executive summary [
PDF: 4860 KB] [
] - Chapter 1—Introduction [
PDF: 781 KB] [
] - Chapter 2—Travel markets [
PDF: 2576 KB] [
] - Chapter 3—Service and operations [
PDF: 1894 KB] [
] - Chapter 4—Alignment and station locations [
PDF: 13229 KB] [
] - Chapter 5—Station concepts and layouts [
PDF: 10193 KB] [
] - Chapter 6—Staged delivery [
PDF: 420 KB] [
] - Chapter 7—Appraisal of the commercial performance of HSR [
PDF: 5106 KB] [
] - Chapter 8—Economic appraisal of the preferred HSR system [
PDF: 2498 KB] [
] - Chapter 9—Urban and regional development [
PDF: 1311 KB] [
] - Chapter 10—Governance and institutional framework for HSR [
PDF: 755 KB] [
] - Chapter 11—Procurement and delivery structures for HSR [
PDF: 435 KB] [
] - Chapter 12—Implementation plan [
PDF: 525 KB] [
] - Acronyms [
PDF: 73 KB] [
] - Glossary [
PDF: 88 KB] [
] - Appendices
- Full Report [
PDF: 41 MB]
Detailed preferred alignment
280 detailed maps show the preferred alignment identified in the study. Click on the map for detail of a particular geographic area.
Feedback
- The Minister has invited feedback on the phase 2 report, which can be provided until 30 June 2013 via the online form.
Contact details
- The easiest way to provide feedback on the phase 2 report is via the online form. For other enquiries, the Department can be contacted at highspeedrailstudy@infrastructure.gov.au.
