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UK PM Sunak offers billions for new links after scrapping HS2 northern leg

By Alistair Smout and Sarah Young

MANCHESTER (Reuters) – British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak cancelled the northern leg of the costly HS2 high-speed rail project on Wednesday and pledged to invest billions of pounds in local rail and road links instead, saying it was more suitable for a post-pandemic world.

The move to cut in half Britain’s biggest infrastructure project was criticised by business groups and trade unions, who warned it would hit the country’s productivity, cause job losses, and put more lorries on the roads.

Following weeks of speculation, Sunak told his party’s annual conference – in the northern city of Manchester – that the high-speed line would now finish in Birmingham in central England and not Manchester, after costs doubled and business travel patterns changed after the pandemic.

Instead he added: “We will reinvest every single penny, 36 billion pounds, in hundreds of new transport projects in the north and the midlands, across the country.”

HS2 was designed to connect the British capital with the major cities in central and northern England. But costs soared to over 106 billion pounds ($129 billion) at a 2020 estimate from the 56 billion pounds bill forecast in 2015. The eastern link to Leeds had already been scrapped.

Stephen Phipson, chief executive of manufacturing trade group Make UK, said the cancellation raised questions about Britain’s ability to complete major infrastructure projects.

“For too long we have lagged behind our competitors in the investment we make,” he said, adding that local or national spending should not be a binary choice.