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City PM Published Jul 1, 2009 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
National Express will be liable for £72 million when it walks away from the franchise, despite having promised to pay £1.4 billion over the contract’s lifetime.
72 million pounds · liability for franchise exit1.4 billion pounds · promised payment over contract lifetime
National Express, rail operator
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Citation-ready fact
The report suggests that up to £29 billion in spending could be cut over a ten‑year period, including a £16 billion Crossrail scheme and a £6 billion motorway improvement scheme, and that the current 1 % plus inflation fare cap could be lifted.
up to 29 billion pounds · spending cuts16 billion pounds · Crossrail scheme6 billion pounds · motorway improvement scheme1 % · fare cap (base level before inflation)
, report
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Citation-ready fact
Virgin Group has spent £15 million on bids for train franchises.
15 million pounds · spending on train franchise bids
Richard Branson, Virgin Group boss
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Citation-ready fact
Transport Secretary Lord Adonis said the franchise would be put back out to tender in late 2010.
Lord Adonis, Transport Secretary
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Citation-ready fact
Transport secretary Lord Adonis stated he would put the franchise back out to tender in late 2010.
2010 year · tender date
Lord Adonis, Transport secretary
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Citation-ready fact
Virgin stated they tried for the East Coast franchise in 2007.
2007 year · East Coast franchise bid
Virgin
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Citation-ready fact
Virgin boss Richard Branson stated that his Virgin Group had spent £15 million on bids for train franchises.
15000000 GBP · spending on train franchise bids
Richard Branson, Virgin boss
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Citation-ready fact
Virgin said it had tried for the East Coast franchise in 2007.
2007 · attempted bid for East Coast franchise
Virgin
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The news capped a day of woe for the UK rail industry, culminating with the leaking of a report suggesting that the government’s transport policy is in total disarray as a result of the crisis in the public finances. The report suggests that up to £29bn in spending could be cut over a 10-year period. The £16bn Crossrail scheme linking Heathrow to Canary Wharf and Essex could be delayed; a £6bn motorway improvement scheme could be cut; a mooted high-speed rail route may be delayed; and train fares could rise substantially, with the current one per cent plus inflation cap on fares lifted.

National Express will be liable for just £72m when it walks away from the franchise, even though it promised to pay £1.4bn over the lifetime of the contract when it bid for the franchise. The firm decided it could no longer afford the agreed payments to the Treasury because its revenue forecasts turned out to be much too optimistic. Transport secretary Lord Adonis described National Express’ default as “regrettable and disappointing”, and said he would put the franchise back out to tender in late 2010.

But while some in government would like to punish National Express further, the firms’ lawyers don’t believe the government would have the powers to strip it of its other two franchises. Adonis said: “Today’s events do not represent the failure of the system, but the failure of one company”, and added that it was “unacceptable to reap rewards of contracts when times are good, only to walk away from them when times are challenging”. He appointed Elaine Holt as chief executive-designate of the new east coast line. Richard Bowker confirmed he was quitting National Express and moving to Abu Dhabi. 

Several firms said they might want to bid for the franchise. “We will see what the invitation for tender looks like from the Department of Transport,” Virgin said. “We did try for the East Coat franchise in 2007 with what we thought was a sensible bid. National Express beat us with the money they would pay to the government but we are seeing the consequences of that now.” Meanwhile, FirstGroup, which made an approach for a possible takeover bid of National Express earlier this week, said it too would not rule out bidding for the franchise. Go-Ahead, Stagecoach, Deutsche Bahn and MTR may also be interested. Rail operator Grand Central said: “If the DfT re-tenders the franchise, we would look carefully at it”. Virgin boss Richard Branson urged the government to use the situation as an opportunity to look again at the franchise system. “The DfT must ensure some level of innovation, financial robustness and quality is built in,” he said. He added that his Virgin Group had spent £15m on bids for train franchises, saying “this cannot be right.”

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