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Britain: Labours privatisation of roads
By Jean Shaoul
22 July 2004
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Secretary of State for Transport Alastair Darling recently
announced plans to open a private toll road between Birmingham
and Manchester.
The private toll road would, he said, extend to motorists the
choice that was now being extended to parents in their
choice of schools for their children or to patients for their
hospital treatment. Drivers could either pay to drive on a traffic-free
route, to be known as the M6 Expressway, or they could drive on
the old, congested M6 for freei.e., after paying
taxes that in turn are used to maintain the transport network.
The new road forms part of the Labour governments broader
strategy, set out in its White Paper Meeting the Transport
Challenge, of introducing a market for roads and a system
of charging drivers to use the roads, alongside similar plans
for health and education. It goes far beyond the plans of the
Conservative government that it replaced in 1997.
Far from resolving Britains gridlock or pollution, much
less providing an integrated transport policyLabours
mantra of the 1990sthe announcement demonstrates that every
aspect of public policy in Britain today is to be subordinated
to providing a new source of profits for the banks and major corporations.
For the mass of the population, it means ever-greater rises
in the cost of living (particularly for the poorest families for
whom transport is one of the largest costs), the daily misery
of gridlock in the most car-dependent country in Europe, and threats
to health and the environment.
Darling proposes a 51-mile toll motorway to run alongside the
existing M6 motorway between Birmingham and Manchester, to relieve
congestion along the route that carries 140,000 vehicles a day.
The private sector will finance, build and operate the road, which
is likely to cost about £1 billion.
While his plan is officially described as a consultation
exercise, this is only a euphemism for finding out more
precisely the requirements of the governments corporate
backers and how they can best sell this agenda to the public.
It follows just seven months after the opening in December
2003 of Britains first private toll road, the Birmingham
North Relief Road, proposed by the Conservative government of
Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s and initiated under her successor
John Major in 1992. Intended to relieve congestion for north-south
traffic, the new toll road carries only 20 percent of the traffic
on the existing motorway, despite reducing the charge to £2
for cars.
The private road operator, Midland Expressway Ltd., a consortium
made up of the Norwegian Kvaerner Construction Co. and the Australian
Macquarie Bank, is free to charge what it likes without considering
any broader transport requirements. Not surprisingly, therefore,
it has set its prices in a way that minimises its future maintenance
costs: the toll for heavy-goods vehicles is five times the price
for cars.
The new road is so free of traffic that drivers regularly break
the speed limit. Speed enforcement is almost nonexistent.
Darlings latest proposals make just as little sense from
any rational perspective. Firstly, though the M6 is indeed busy,
it is far from the most congested road in Britain. Secondly, all
the evidence shows that the more roads that are built, the more
the volume of traffic rises as corporations move out to the more
easily accessible locations that are ill-served by public transport.
That in turn would make the achievement of Britains target
under the Kyoto agreement on greenhouse gases hard to meet.
Thirdly, the government has been forced to bankroll the £10
billion upgrade of the west coast main line (WCML) being carried
out by Network Rail, the not-for-profit reincarnation of the failed
privatised rail infrastructure company, Railtrack. The WCML will
permit a twice-hourly service between Birmingham and Manchester
and reduce the 200-mile journey from London to Manchester to two
hours and ten minutes.
The competition from the additional road capacity will threaten
the financial viability of the new service, leading to ever-higher
fares that will deter rail travel or public subsidies, or both,
if the intercity rail service is to be maintained.
The development of a market in transport
The use of private finance in public infrastructure in Britain
was part of the Conservative governments wider policy of
rolling back the state that began in the 1980s.
It introduced numerous measures to liberalise transport, reduce
regulation, remove the barriers that prevented the private sector
from supplying public road transport, privatised services, including
air, sea ferries, ports, harbours, coach, bus and rail, and thus
created a far more extensive market for transport. These privatisations
have helped to spawn a quarter of Britains top 100 companies.
The use of private finance, which began in the 1970s and 1980s
on the international arena, had by the 1990s become widespread
in transport, power and water, often at the behest of the World
Bank/IMF as the precondition for loans. Britain was one of the
first countries to turn to private finance, with the Department
of Transport being the first government department to use it to
any significant degree. The European Union has now adopted this
approach for transport and other public infrastructure.
By 1994, Britain had made more use of private finance in transport,
by far the largest sector, than any other country apart from China.
Early transport projects included the Channel Tunnel, the Dartford
toll bridge over the Thames, the Second Severn Bridge, the Skye
Bridge, the Birmingham North Relief Road, the Channel Tunnel Rail
Link and the Croydon Tramlink. All of these were to be new builds,
usually privately owned, and were to be privately managed with
user charges. Other recent projects included several light rail
systems, usually municipally owned but privately run.
In 1990, the Conservative government introduced legislation
giving the secretary of state for transport the power to charge
users directly for new, but not existing, roads and bridges. This
was a major change because although a handful of bridges and tunnels
that were owned by local authorities were tolled, those run by
central government were free.
In 1993, the Conservative government also announced Design,
Build, Finance and Operate (DBFO) concessions. Under DBFO contracts,
the private sector would extend or widen a road, operate and maintain
it and a further stretch of road for a 30-year period. It chose
a 30-year period because the payment mechanism had to enable the
debt finance, which typically has a repayment period of 20 years,
to be repaid and ensure a return to the shareholders.
Whereas the government had wanted to introduce tolls, the private
sector feared the political opposition it would cause. Numerous
such projects in Mexico, Latin America and Africa had collapsed
because of the publics refusal to pay the charges and use
the roads. Consequently, the governments advisors, PWC,
devised a scheme whereby the government would pay the contractor
on the basis of a shadow toll set according to the
volume of traffic using the roads. The Tories saw the system of
shadow tolls as a precursor for direct user charges.
Run as shadow tolls, the schemesunlike the new hospital
buildsattracted little attention. The government divulged
few details to the public, using the excuse of commercial
confidentiality. This was a lie, as it had to provide financial
information to the capital markets whose investors wanted to estimate
their likely returns.
Few, other than the capital markets, knew that the government
had guaranteed the payments to the private sector, thereby underwriting
not only the banks but also the corporations profits.
It was some years before the government published how much it
was all costing.
In just three years, 1999-2002, it paid out £618 million,
more than the £590 million construction cost. Yet, the original
justification for DBFO was that the government could not afford
to build the new roads. Over the 30-year life of the contracts,
the projects should net £6 billion for the private sector.
Of the £210 million annual payment by the government, the
private corporations make a truly awesome 68 percent profit.
Far from repudiating any of these measures, the incoming Labour
government rushed to embrace them and developed them further.
The governments national 10-year transport plan, Transport
2010, has allocated £21 billion to the strategic
road network, 25 percent of which will involve private finance.
Under the guise of congestion-charging, it has
introduced legislation to allow local authorities to charge road
users directly for existing roads.
It signed off the partial privatisation of the National Air
Traffic Services in 2001 and London Underground under its Public
Private Partnerships scheme in 2003.
It stepped in to bail out the privately financed Channel Tunnel
Rail Link, the privatised rail industry and the National Air Traffic
Services PPP.
The governments White Paper Meeting the Transport
Challenge reinforces its support for the creation of a market
in road transport:
* It has welcomed the conclusion of a feasibility study that
satellite technology could be used for charging motorists for
every journey they make, although this could take more than a
decade to implement.
* It will give incentives to local authorities to introduce
congestion-charging schemes.
* The long-awaited Crossrail project to build a new east-west
rail link across London will be built with private finance.
* Its decision to give greater responsibility for
transport schemes to the cash-strapped regional and local authorities
is a thinly disguised attempt to push the burden of funding infrastructure
schemes onto local bodies and thereby force them into road pricing
as a way of raising revenues.
See Also:
Britain: Foundation
hospitals mean health inequality is official government policy
[19 May 2003]
Britain: Labour government
moves to market based higher education
[12 February 2003]
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