Business Travel Conference
Speech to the Business Travel Conference.

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Thank you for that introduction.
And good afternoon ladies and gentlemen.
It鈥檚 a pleasure to be here today (5 June 2013).
And to have this opportunity to speak at the Business Travel Conference.
Because of all the transport audiences I address as a minister, you must be among the best informed and most discerning.
As professionals whose job it is to keep business people on the move, in the most efficient, reliable and cost-effective way鈥�
You have a unique insight into our transport system鈥�
Where it delivers, and where it falls short.
You also understand the vital importance of transport to our economy.
And why we need invest in road, rail and air links if we鈥檙e to attract the multi-national investors of tomorrow.
So today I鈥檇 like to talk about the progress that we in the coalition have made over the past 3 years.
How we鈥檙e reversing decades of underinvestment.
And why we still have a hugely challenging agenda ahead of us building the modern transport system that we all want to see.
Lessons from the past
One of the reasons why Britain was so prosperous in the Victorian era was our control of trade routes 鈥� over both land and sea.
Transport gave us a huge competitive advantage鈥�
Connecting manufacturing industry with raw materials, parts and labour
Opening up a huge international market for our products and services
And helping attract foreign investors to Britain.
Today, it is the same ready connections and access to global markets that is driving the growth of economies like China, India and Brazil.
Yet somewhere along the line, Britain forgot this lesson.
After the coming of the motorways, we increasingly neglected our transport infrastructure鈥�.
Adopting a 鈥榩atch and mend鈥� approach鈥�
Because it was cheaper, easier, and less politically sensitive.
In 2009, the World Economic Forum ranked the UK 33 in the world for the quality of its infrastructure.
By contrast, France and Germany were in the top ten.
For much of the previous decade, the UK had been the lowest infrastructure investor of all the OECD countries.
So even in good times, when money was plentiful, we failed to close the infrastructure gap with our competitors.
Transport key under coalition
But today, we鈥檙e breaking that cycle of underinvestment.
Under the coalition, transport has a higher government profile than it has enjoyed for decades.
皇冠体育app Department for Transport is no longer a political backwater.
It鈥檚 a core economic ministry.
We may not have the luxury of a thriving economy and healthy fiscal surplus that the previous government inherited.
But we do understand that we have a real responsibility to tackle our most stubborn and enduring transport problems.
Roads
Take road congestion.
It needs sorting out.
So we announced 拢1.5 billion in the 鈥楢utumn statement鈥� to improve the road network, ease congestion and speed up journeys.
We鈥檝e moved forward construction of key road schemes.
And we鈥檙e piloting new models that will halve the delivery time for new roads.
We know this is only a start.
But we鈥檙e also working on a more radical and ambitious strategy that will consider new ways to finance roads, and get traffic moving.
Rail
We鈥檙e also delivering the biggest rail modernisation programme for well over a century.
Network Rail plans to spend 拢37 billion to run and expand the railway between 2014 and 2019.
Of that, the government is investing over 拢9 billion to deliver major improvements across the country.
At any time, this would be a considerable sum.
But in the current economic climate, it鈥檚 an unprecedented commitment to the future of rail.
It means we can deliver Crossrail and Thameslink.
850 miles of electrification.
And the 拢4.9 billion Inter City Express Programme.
But we鈥檙e not funding these schemes by simply borrowing more and more.
Instead, we鈥檙e making our railway more efficient.
Reducing annual rail bills by 拢3.5 billion.
And redirecting money towards schemes which offer the highest rates of growth.
As a result, by the end of this decade, we will have delivered an extra 140,000 seats on trains at peak times.
Real money. Real action. Delivering real improvements for business travellers.
HS2
But it鈥檚 a sign of how far behind we鈥檝e fallen as a country that even this unparalleled investment in rail won鈥檛 be enough.
皇冠体育app overall number of rail journeys in this country has doubled in a little over 15 years.
That鈥檚 an astonishing growth rate.
And it鈥檚 one that has had very serious implications for the millions of business travellers who use the railway, and who have seen services decline over that period.
Long distance rail travel is growing even faster 鈥� from 54 miles to 125 miles journeys over the same period 鈥� and demand continues to rise year-on-year.
At the present rate, the West Coast Main Line will be overwhelmed in just over a decade.
In 2011, during the morning peak, there were on average 4,000 people standing on arrival into Euston, and 5,000 people standing on arrival into Birmingham.
That means there are already around 115 passengers for every 100 seats.
If there is a single reason why we need HS2, this is it.
HS2 will transform business travel in the UK.
Superfast connections.
Superb comfort and passenger facilities.
But most important of all, High Speed 2 will provide the capacity we need to meet demand, with up to 18 trains an hour, each carrying as many as 1,100 passengers.
It will more than double the number of seats between London and Birmingham.
And it will also liberate vital space on the existing railway and on our roads.
HS2 will also be a huge shot in the arm for our economy.
皇冠体育app benefits of the new network will truly be felt nationwide.
It will change Britain鈥檚 economic geography, bringing cities in the North and Midlands closer together so they can rival London for jobs and opportunities.
By connecting seamlessly onto existing rail lines, high speed trains will also link places like Newcastle, Liverpool, Glasgow and Edinburgh.
We have assessed the alternatives to HS2, and both Network Rail and Atkins confirm they will not offer the same benefits as high speed.
Upgrading the West Coast and Chiltern lines from London to Birmingham would cost more than the equivalent section of HS2 and deliver only two thirds the capacity.
That鈥檚 why we need to win the high speed debate 鈥� with your support 鈥� and get cracking with HS2 as soon as possible.
Aviation
Aviation capacity is equally important to our prosperity.
And despite the impression given by some recent media reports, the UK currently has excellent air connections.
London鈥檚 airports offer at least weekly direct services to over 360 destinations worldwide.
We have the third largest aviation network in the world after the USA and China.
Around the country, airports and airlines are investing in new facilities and new routes.
Gatwick鈥檚 in the middle of a massive development programme.
It recently announced a further 拢1 billion of investment.
And Heathrow鈥檚 being transformed too.
After Terminal 5鈥�
And the opening of the new Terminal 2 next year 鈥�
Over half the airport will have been rebuilt鈥�
Making it one of the most modern in Europe.
But with Heathrow鈥檚 runways practically full, it has little room in which to grow.
Unlike Paris, Frankfurt and Amsterdam.
Without action, they will be able to pick up new routes and expand as hubs at our expense.
So we鈥檙e determined to take the necessary action to maintain our status as Europe鈥檚 leading hub.
Make no mistake about that.
Past attempts to agree on a future hub airport strategy have been hampered by a lack of consensus.
We need to build that consensus, with an expert and independent body to take the work forward.
We also need accurate, up-to-date evidence to assess our hub airport requirements.
So we鈥檝e established the Airports Commission.
A body without vested interests鈥� and unencumbered by pre-conceived ideas or politics.
皇冠体育app Commission is chaired by Sir Howard Davies, whose expertise and experience is invaluable.
Sir Howard and his team are identifying how any need for additional capacity should be met in the short, medium and long term.
皇冠体育app Commission鈥檚 first report will come later this year, and will set out actions we can take now, and options for the future.
A final report will be produced in summer 2015.
It鈥檚 nonsense to suggest this about kicking a difficult issue into the long grass.
In fact it鈥檚 precisely the opposite.
This is about a government recognising that the only way we can end the years of indecision and inaction on this issue is by taking a new approach.
Conclusion
So to sum up.
Undoing the damage done by decades of failed transport policy is a big challenge.
But it鈥檚 a challenge we must meet.
How can Britain hope to compete with established competitors like Germany, France and Japan鈥�
Or emerging competitors like China, India and Brazil鈥�
If we continue to neglect our transport network?
It鈥檚 a sobering thought that by the time HS2 is due to open, the West Coast Main Line 鈥� which is the busiest and most important stretch of rail track in the country 鈥� will be almost 200 years old.
So we have to build a foundation for long-term transport change in this country.
Not just a change in investment 鈥� crucial though that is.
But also a change in the way we plan and deliver transport policy.
We have to raise our aspirations, and put the years of decline behind us.
Only then will we achieve the step change in transport services that business travellers have the right to expect.
Thank-you.