A shorter journey time may not be sufficient for people to ditch their cars in favour of high speed rail, a new study has revealed.
A survey by the Automobile Association (AA) of its members revealed 97% don’t see speed as the most important factor when deciding to use high speed rail.
Price, however, is important: almost two-thirds (62%) of respondents said they would be most concerned about the cost of tickets.
The proximity of the station to work or home also ranked high, with 18% saying it would be the most important factor in making a decision on whether to use high speed rail.
AA polled 16,850 motorists for the study, who were divided on whether they would use high speed rail if it was available for a journey they usually make by car.
A third (33%) said they would swap to rail, a third (34%) wouldn’t, and a third (33%) said they didn’t know what they would do.
Edmund King, AA’s president, said: “It appears that perhaps the main raison d’être of high speed rail – speed – seems pretty irrelevant to most drivers.
“We believe that rail enhancements that are cheaper, based more on reliability and increased capacity, rather than speed, would be much more effective in convincing some drivers to let the train take the strain.”
King suggested that if speed is not the over-riding factor, the government is “backing the wrong horse with HS2”.
“This scheme will not provide best value for money,” he said. “Spending the £34bn cost on conventional rail upgrades, removing road bottlenecks, building bypasses and improving road maintenance would provide much better value for money.”