Railways Bill electrification amendment: planning implications for engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on New Civil Engineer
30 Second Briefing
A proposed amendment to the Railways Bill that would have required Great British Railways to commit to a rolling programme of mainline electrification was rejected by the House of Commons Bill committee. Ministers argued that mandating continuous overhead line installation in primary legislation is “not the right way”, favouring case‑by‑case schemes instead. The decision prolongs uncertainty for track designers, bridge clearance modellers and traction power planners seeking long‑term programmes for 25kV AC upgrades and associated civil works.
Technical Brief
- Amendment would have imposed a statutory duty on Great British Railways to plan ongoing mainline electrification.
- Requirement was framed as a “rolling programme”, implying continuous sequencing of OLE design and construction packages.
- Defeat occurred at House of Commons committee stage, so no such obligation enters the primary legislation.
- Without a statutory rolling programme, long‑lead items like OLE mast foundations and portal structures remain scheme‑by‑scheme.
- Interfaces with bridge reconstructions, track lowerings and gauge clearance works will continue to depend on discrete business cases.
- Traction power feeder station siting and supply reinforcement will be planned project‑specifically rather than via a network roadmap.
- Supply‑chain capacity for specialist electrification plant and crews will be managed through intermittent frameworks, not guaranteed pipelines.
- For other corridors considering conversion, the decision signals reliance on periodic, Treasury‑approved schemes rather than mandated continuity.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.


