Plans submitted for new rail freight line in Ipswich

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Network Rail’s plans for the Ipswich chord – a £41m investment in Ipswich’s railway that will ultimately take up to 750,000 lorry journeys off the road every year – has been accepted for examination by the Infrastructure Planning Commission (IPC).

The company has consulted with the public and interested stakeholders over its plans to build a new 1km stretch of track, or ‘chord’ line, north of Ipswich goods yard, linking the East Suffolk line and Great Eastern main line on part of the site of the former Harris meat factory.

Today, most of Anglia’s freight trains that need to travel from the Port of Felixstowe to the north have to travel down the busy Great Eastern main line, through London and up the West Coast main line to save having to turn around in the sidings adjacent to Ipswich station in order to use the shorter cross-country Felixstowe to Nuneaton route.

The Ipswich Chord will remove that bottleneck and free up capacity for both passenger and freight services.

Once this work and Network Rail’s other enhancements of the line from Felixstowe to Nuneaton via Ipswich, Ely and Peterborough are complete in 2014, the route will provide more direct journeys for freight trains travelling from the Port of Felixstowe to the Midlands, north-west and Scotland, and the potential for faster freight journeys to Yorkshire.

Now the IPC has given its validation, it has made all the application documents available on its web site, along with details of the examination process and how to get involved.

The documents and further information are also available on the Network Rail website.

Andrew Munden, Network Rail route director for Anglia, said:

“We thank everyone who has supported our project so far. We now look forward to getting on with this project that will take up to 750,000 lorry journeys off the road every year by 2030, reducing traffic congestion, improving road safety and reducing carbon emissions by around three-quarters.”

If the plans are approved, work on the scheme is due to start in 2012 and will be completed in early 2014.

 

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