1 December 2023

Support to put stalled Canberra to Sydney fast rail project 'back on track'

| Claire Fenwicke
Join the conversation
17
NSW TrainLink Southern XPLORER train

While the Canberra to Sydney trains are getting an upgrade, there’s been yet another push to make the trip faster. Photo: John Coleman.

Conversations about fast rail from Canberra to Sydney have been ongoing for decades but the ACT Greens believe the time is right to get the project “back on track”.

Transport spokesperson Jo Clay called on all ACT parties to write to their NSW and federal counterparts and urge them to support the project “in a timely manner”, stating it was “time to crack on”.

“The beauty is that right now we have a ACT Government, a NSW Government and a Federal Government who all say we want faster trains from Canberra to Sydney,” she said.

“With all that support, the job is simply to liaise and lobby and get the job done.”

The Federal Government has previously indicated its support for fast rail, establishing the High Speed Rail Authority earlier this year.

It’s also on the National Infrastructure Priority List.

Ms Clay said she was happy for the experts to determine the best route, but this was about finally getting a plan together and then all governments moving forward to deliver it.

“I’ve been in Canberra my whole life, I’ve heard all of the conversations about bullet trains, very fast trains – it would be great if Australia had that kind of rail network,” she said.

“The Greens are pragmatists, what we’re actually asking for is just a faster train than four hours between Canberra and Sydney.”

Ms Clay said the ageing infrastructure should be upgraded in the meantime to bring down the travel time, while the fast rail case was being developed.

She said it would also help with cost of living pressures and emissions reduction.

READ ALSO Qantas promises more reliable service on Canberra to Sydney route

It’s an idea supported by all sides of ACT politics.

Chief Minister Andrew Barr has long been an advocate for faster rail to the Territory.

Mr Barr said he’d been having “positive engagement” with the new Labor governments in NSW and the Commonwealth.

He’s already written to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese outlining three key infrastructure projects for consideration, including upgrading the Canberra to Sydney rail network, and discussed the matter with NSW Premier Chris Minns and the NSW Transport Minister.

“We will continue to prioritise this issue with the NSW and federal governments,” Mr Barr said.

“It will require all three governments to work together but I am encouraged by the early responses from both my NSW and federal counterparts.”

Shadow Transport Minister Mark Parton also voiced his support, even though he felt the motion was a “benign piece of virtue signalling” for something mainly under the control of governments outside the ACT.

He said, despite what some may think, the Canberra Liberals weren’t opposed to “everything on rails”.

“Contrary to popular belief, [we] don’t hate things that run on rails, just things that cost too much and take too long to deliver,” Mr Parton said.

READ ALSO No light rail stage 2B business case until after next election, Steel confirms

Transport Minister Chris Steel said higher airfare ticket costs during the current economic environment, possibly due to reliability issues on the Canberra to Sydney flights, had seen an increased number of travellers using the train service.

“In some cases it’s been booked out, which is fantastic to see, so we actually need more services [and] we need faster services in the future as well,” he said.

Transport for NSW is in the process of replacing its ageing regional rail fleet, which will be used between Sydney and Canberra.

The ACT Government is also considering further potential upgrades to Canberra’s railway station.

Join the conversation

17
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest
Stephen Saunders12:23 pm 03 Dec 23

Road/air lobbies thoroughly “own” Australian transit. They’ll never permit Sydney/Canberra rail upgrade. To 20th [let alone 21st] century standards.

Latest policy triumphs are the Rozelle Interchange and Qatar Air fiascos. I don’t want to call this “third world” corruption. That would be disrespectful to the third world.

Tom Worthington7:50 am 03 Dec 23

I traveled from Sydney to Canberra in 1995 on a trail of the Swedish X2000 high speed tilt train. It was very comfortable, but like subsequent high speed plans, it got stuck behind some traffic so was a slow trip.

Battery technology has perhaps progressed to the point where a high speed train with no overhead wires would be feasible. This could stop at new cities to recharge along the way (and the increased land value pay for the train). It just needs to be faster than driving, and almost as fast as flying.

Can someone please point at reliable source comparing diesel trains to diesel buses in terms of environment per person per kilometre? Everything I see only points out that the current diesel train running is not a great environmental option anyway (compared to Murrays) and it is unlikely the replacement will be all electric either?

HiddenDragon7:20 pm 02 Dec 23

The outbreak of public hostilities between the federal and state governments on a number of fronts, including the NDIS, GST and infrastructure cost sharing, but all basically about money, does not augur well for anything more than a best intentions approach to this project for some years to come – which is a shame.

Capital Retro4:52 pm 02 Dec 23

Ms Clay needs to de-fantasize up and read this again and again and again:

https://hotrails.net/2014/09/

O my aching sides….
I’m 54 this has been talked about since I was seven years old.
Please. Someone. Just. Stop.

limestonecowboy2:35 pm 02 Dec 23

It can’t be April fools day? This project has been “on the cards” since the early 70s.
Australia is incapable of implementing projects like this. “Utopia”, the ABC spoof program has given it appropriate treatment.
Until we get rid of mediocre politicians, interstate jealousy, NIMBYs and the naysayers this country’s rail network will remain in the “19th century” time warp it has been since Federation. It is frankly a joke and the vested interests of air and road transport will kybosh any attempt to get fast rail up and running.
China had zero fast rail 30 years ago. It now has more than the rest of the world combined. Democracy 0 Authoritarian Regime 1

It’s a total embarrassment.

@limestonecowboy
Actually it’s High Density Population 1 v Low Density Population 0 … there are multiple democracies, e.g. in Europe, which have vft’s.

Brendan Vernon2:30 pm 02 Dec 23

The Feds just cut money to infrastructure projects and “high speed” rail to Canberra is hardly a national project with 3 Labor House of reps and 2 Labor/Labor like Senators

In 1995 there was a period when services between Sydney and Canberra were provided with stops at Campbelltown, Goulburn and, for some services at Moss Vale timetabled between 3hr 23min and 3hr 28min. Tilting carriages were used, but, significantly, the XPT type locomotives used did not tilt.

This demonstrates that with appropriate rolling stock and existing infrastructure, a time of well under 3 1/2hr is practical right now. What is needed is for TrainLink to get its mojo back, and for the removal of the ‘dead hand’ of infrastructure maintenance and access focussed only on the needs of freight and urban services.

The headline is a bit misleading, what is being talked about is not “fast rail” but “slightly less inadequately paced rail”.
Some double tracking, straightening, etc should be possible but quite costly in the slowest parts. That would all take place in NSW, but the ACT would be expected to share some of the costs. If an hour could be trimmed to make it comparable to the bus, that might allow a fourth daily service without the extra crew cost. Could an hour could be cut by that alone, even with the new diesel-electrics NSW are getting?

True HSR is a long way off, and would require huge money spent on a station in Civic – probably underground. It would perhaps be the last links in any potential genuine HSR build.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Riotact stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.