• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
Transform Scotland

Transform Scotland

  • About Us
        • Our team
        • Our members
        • Contact us
        • About us

  • Our Work
        • Publications
        • Our projects
        • Consultancy
        • Cross Party Group
        • Our work

  • Latest
        • News
        • Alerts
        • Events
        • Latest

  • Join us
  • Donate

UK Government will have to take action on fuel duty for Railways to be able to compete

15 April 2025

by Transform Scotland

FacebookTweetEmailLinkedIn

Transform Scotland has submitted its response to the UK Department for Transport’s ‘A Railway Fit For Britain’s Future’ consultation.

You can read both our response and the Scottish Association for Public Transport’s response at the end of this page.

In our response, Transform welcomes the DfT’s aim to bring track and train together as this should aid planning, both short and long term, increase efficiency of operations, and reduce overall costs.

However, UK Ministers will also have to take action in other areas of transport for the railways to again become competitive on price with road transport. Transform rail spokesperson Paul Tetlaw said:

“Government policy on fuel duty plays a key role in the choice of mode for both passenger and freight services. For freight, access charges have increased by 105% for bulk and over 80% for intermodal since 2010 while fuel duty on road transport has been frozen since 2010 and further reduced since 2022. Electricity costs for freight operators are another key element in the attractiveness and affordability of electric traction. Here we’ve had the bizarre consequence of operators reverting to diesel traction on electrified sections of railway which runs counter to any decarbonisation aims and eats into valuable capacity on the network.”

Transform Scotland is critical of the DfT’s plans for failing to set out a clear vision for the railway or a real sense of direction. Paul Tetlaw commented:

“The planning, development and operation of the railway all require long-term and consistent strategies. For it to be a success and play a key role in economic, social and environmental policies this has to sit within the appropriate broader government policies on transport and land use planning. We must move away from the simplistic approach that considers the cost of the railway as merely a balance between money raised from passengers and taxpayers to a wider understanding of the value delivered to society as a whole.”

In particular, Transform stresses the need for five-year funding cycles to be extended across the whole of the railway. Paul Tetlaw said:

“The rail supply industry must have confidence in long-term plans on matters such as electrification and rolling stock replacement to allow them to make their own plans; this will reduce costs and increase efficiency. We must never see a return to the ‘hand to mouth existence’ typified by annual settlements, while suffering from the short-term whims of government ministers. These conditions only serve to undermine trust in the UK and to increase costs: it is only to be expected if suppliers decide to focus on overseas markets if they deem the UK to lack long-term plans, and is seen to be unreliable with regard to whatever plans may have in place at any given time.”

Downloads

Transform Scotland consultation response

Scottish Association for Public Transport (SAPT) consultation response

External Links

DfT consultation

NewsPublic transport

Share

FacebookTweetEmailLinkedIn
Back to Latest

Latest posts

Making the £60m Bus Infrastructure Fund deliver for passengers

14 January 2026

Bus Project Manager Stacey O’Flaherty responds to the draft Scottish Budget 2026-2027, setting out why this presents a major opportunity to deliver visible improvements for bus passengers across Scotland.

Read more

Newsbuses Policy Public transport

Jets, buses and roads: Our top 3 takeaways from the Scottish Budget

13 January 2026

Public affairs manager Laura Hyde-White takes a look at today’s draft Scottish Budget, outlining Transform’s initial thoughts on the general trends in transport expenditure, as well as on one of…

Read more

NewsCars Policy Public transport Traffic

6 questions for ’26

12 January 2026

Looking at the year ahead, director Colin Howden poses a series of hard questions about the future direction of transport in Scotland. 1. Will we see even one mile of…

Read more

NewsActive Travel Cars Climate Equalities Investment Public transport Traffic

Transform’s 2025: Wrapped

18 December 2025

With an eventful year drawing to a close, join us as we reflect on our best moments, month by month.  📌 Getting ScotRail on the right track | January At…

Read more

News

Sign up for email updates

We'll send you news on our work, plus other updates about how you can get involved in Scotland's campaign for sustainable transport.

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Cookies policy
  • Credits
  • Accessibility
  • Work for us
  • Leave a legacy
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • LinkedIn

© 2026 Transform Scotland is a registered Scottish charity (SC041516)