
That seems the sensible approach.Didn't they say that whenever a current contract is up they'll just nationalise them then.
Yes, and hopefully it'll silence those who think net zero is a pipe dream. A quick look at some other countries will show you that it's clearly not, Portugal is already hitting about 97% renewables, California sometimes produces so much electricity from renewable sources that people are being sent text messages telling them they can charge their car for free, Spain is also producing shit loads of renewable power.Great British Energy is the big one for me.
Yep, that's right. The rail network is on the books at about £80bn but is in public hands.That's applies for the companies who run the trains, but what about the infrastructure?
Edit: network rail is kinda already nationalised
I think you’re right. If you look at government spending on rail, the two main areas of leakage to the private sector are profits in the train operating companies and the leasing companies. Bringing the TOCs into public ownership removes the former, but you’ve still got a few hundred £m leaking into the leasing companies. As with the utilities, it would cost money to bring those companies into public ownership.So the franchise falls back in to the Government's hand but what about the rolling stock. My knowledge here is pretty limited but I think much of the rolling stock is leased by the franchisee's from large investors - mainly the big banks. So instead of the franchises filling the banks pockets it'll be the government?Whilst we've heard about the vast profits that have been made in energy and water, the only big profits I've heard about in the railways is in leasing rolling stock.
Clarke’s argument is essentially the case for all privatisation, bu it misses the central point that these industries were nationalised in the first place because they should be focused on best possible service. That’s at odds with a profit motive for a private operator.A good few years ago I heard Ken Clarke who had been the treasurer when it happened saying there was great belief all around cabinet and beyond that the railways were being mismanaged by incompetent public sector lazy people and the markets would whip it into shape. He said he regularly bumped into fellow decision makers who were embarrassed about how wrong they were on both counts (it was actually an incredibly complex system ran super efficiently). It's been a disaster. As we can see every time we use trains overseas.
Where they are running late, it’s determined by the final stop. So they could decide to miss shit loads of stops to make up time and avoid the fine. Fuck the users who need to get off at those missed stops.And in rail, they get fined less for cancelling a train than for running it late (or at least they used to).
It’s a monopoly. Or a racket. Whatever way you look at it the public is being shafted.The whole idea of privatising water is a joke, how would you introduce competition into the water supply?
So (eventual) nationalisation will have one operator maximising the track and rolling stock capacity to provide as frequent a service with as many carriages but at roughly the same cost to travel across the whole of the UKAll I know is if I want to be in London traveling from Liverpool one way tomorrow morning it's 171 quid. Comparable journey from hamburg to Berlin tomorrow morning is 53 euro. Corbyn's Britain. What a mess
Network Rail is considered 'arms length' public sector. Up until a few years ago (can't remember exactly, I wanna say it was maybe around the start of Control Period 5, so 2014ish) they were able to borrow money off the markets and didn't show up on the government's books.Yep, that's right. The rail network is on the books at about £80bn but is in public hands.
As I understand it, that doesn't cover everything in the network. I worked on the HS1 takeover, for example, and HS1 sits in a separate company (effectively like a rail version of a PFI deal). The physical asset sits in a company which has a concession to run the line. There's likely a few other bits and pieces like this.
As with the main rail franchises, the HS1 operation would come into public ownership by default once the concession expires, but from memory it was a 30 year concession. It was sold for around £2bn, but the construction costs were several times higher than that. Rail doesn't pay its own way, it will always need to be subsidised and it makes sense, therefore, that it should be publicly owned.
Dont forget Coffey shitwaterBut on the glass half-full side of things:
Truss
Mordaunt
Shapps
Rees-Mogg
Fabricunt
and others.
See ya!
The effective ban on onshore windfarms has been dropped by the newly elected Labour government, in news that has delighted environmental and energy experts.
