They probably can. But. You don't want to bring in thousands of Chinese workers. Wouldn't look good.
Not looking good for HS2
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- After Pie
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
I get the impression that the actual construction work, however much cheaper at Chinese prices, is only one element of the total cost and so might not provide a sufficiently tempting deal to offset how it looks politically. Boris's perfect outcome is to slash costs as mentioned upthread by unburdening the contractors of their expensive future responsibilities and keep the whole project as flag-wavingly British as possible, as a shining example of post-Brexit Britain surging ahead into the bright new dawn.
Re: Not looking good for HS2
1) They’re claiming to have some sh.t hot track laying tech developed during the huge amounts of high speed track they’ve recently laid in China. This is credible.
2) Not sure why, but they didn’t get involved during the tender stage for HS2 and haven’t formed joint ventures with any of the winning contractors. This sets off massive b.llsh.t alarms.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
The Chinese have built thousands of miles of high speed rail. They are the worlds leading experts. Should just contract the whole thing out to them.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
AFIAA the Chinese have experience building railways in China, where they are the government, and in Africa, where governments are easily bought and sold.
A large part of the cost of HS2 will have been wiggling around existing towns, golf courses and woodlands, etc, whereas the Chinese modus operandi seems to be displacing people and giving zero shits whatsoever about conservation.
That, and having access to unlimited slave labour.
It certainly keeps costs down but I'm not sure it's an approach Britain is quite ready for. Maybe for HS3? If the Chinese are even interested in such a short-distance project that benefits them not at all.
A large part of the cost of HS2 will have been wiggling around existing towns, golf courses and woodlands, etc, whereas the Chinese modus operandi seems to be displacing people and giving zero shits whatsoever about conservation.
That, and having access to unlimited slave labour.
It certainly keeps costs down but I'm not sure it's an approach Britain is quite ready for. Maybe for HS3? If the Chinese are even interested in such a short-distance project that benefits them not at all.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Is it possible to say, however approximately, how the costs of such a project break down? As in % going on construction labour / management and admin labour / plant / materials / disposal / legal / etc?
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
The Chinese would be happy to do it, given the opportunity, if they could make money and gain influence. They have built high speed rail all over the world, not just in China and Africa. Politically, it would be a total non starter in the UK, but its fun to speculate about.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 9:28 amAFIAA the Chinese have experience building railways in China, where they are the government, and in Africa, where governments are easily bought and sold.
A large part of the cost of HS2 will have been wiggling around existing towns, golf courses and woodlands, etc, whereas the Chinese modus operandi seems to be displacing people and giving zero shits whatsoever about conservation.
That, and having access to unlimited slave labour.
It certainly keeps costs down but I'm not sure it's an approach Britain is quite ready for. Maybe for HS3? If the Chinese are even interested in such a short-distance project that benefits them not at all.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_uwrue9cnY
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Links to channel funded entirely by the Chinese government. Proceed with caution.Herainestold wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 4:09 pmThe Chinese would be happy to do it, given the opportunity, if they could make money and gain influence. They have built high speed rail all over the world, not just in China and Africa. Politically, it would be a total non starter in the UK, but its fun to speculate about.Bird on a Fire wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2020 9:28 amAFIAA the Chinese have experience building railways in China, where they are the government, and in Africa, where governments are easily bought and sold.
A large part of the cost of HS2 will have been wiggling around existing towns, golf courses and woodlands, etc, whereas the Chinese modus operandi seems to be displacing people and giving zero shits whatsoever about conservation.
That, and having access to unlimited slave labour.
It certainly keeps costs down but I'm not sure it's an approach Britain is quite ready for. Maybe for HS3? If the Chinese are even interested in such a short-distance project that benefits them not at all.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_uwrue9cnY
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
If the Chinese fancy tendering for it then more power to them.
Oh wait, they've already tendered the contracts for the bulk of phase 1.
Oh wait, they've already tendered the contracts for the bulk of phase 1.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Yes indeed. The people with the most experience building and operating high speed rail, in the world.
This is a silly internet discussion, the Chinese are not and will not be involved in HS2.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
well not much and not yet, anyway.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Unless Boris sells the whole project to them. After he sells the NHS to the Americans.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Is there any reason in principle why Chinese firms couldn't build UK high speed railways? I'm assuming that as Chinese firms are already involved in nuclear power and mobile phone networks that they wouldn't be excluded on strategic grounds from building high speed rail.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
No indeed, but they'd have to go through the procurement processes just like anyone else. I don't know if HS2 are using framework contracts or not, but they just need to up their contracting game.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
From a practical perspective it would make total sense. It wouldn't fly politically, especially for a nationalistic Tory government. Countries where the Chinese have built high speed rail, they have brought in Chinese labour to do much of the work. Nothing wrong with that, but the optics are bad.Woodchopper wrote: ↑Tue Feb 18, 2020 9:08 amIs there any reason in principle why Chinese firms couldn't build UK high speed railways? I'm assuming that as Chinese firms are already involved in nuclear power and mobile phone networks that they wouldn't be excluded on strategic grounds from building high speed rail.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Have I linked to the discussion about the really silly contract model being used for HS2, which passes huge amounts of risk to the contractors and has resulted in costs being about a third higher than they ought to be? (Things like risks for settlement of track over 50 years, which normally sit with the client, but are now being massively over-engineered in order to protect contractors from future liability)?
The suspicion is that they'll go to a more standard model, claim to have knocked heads together, and take the credit for saving billions. I can dig out some links if needed.
The suspicion is that they'll go to a more standard model, claim to have knocked heads together, and take the credit for saving billions. I can dig out some links if needed.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
You did, link, yes. And a great link it was too. Feel free to repeat the link.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Only if people promise to read them this time and not just jump in with half arsed hot takes of headlines they've just read whilst taking a sh.t at work or something.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
I thought the cost difference between TGV and HS2 was that TGV runs in straight lines across the flat farmland of the Paris basin, whereas HS2 was forced to tunnel under the tory-filled shires and the hilly bits up the middle of the country?
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
What would be the fun in that?
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Putin is a monster.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
It's what gets me through the day.
Re: Not looking good for HS2
Is the tunnel and cuttings all the way going to cause flooding problems? I'm thinking of that slopey Veravista photo of the tracks under a couple hundred of metres of water. You'd think they'd have a plan but, you know, Britain.
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Re: Not looking good for HS2
Interesting that piece of track though. It was built after the Derby Sandiacre canal branch, and was fine until some bright spark filled the then derelict canal in. It then flooded to the extent that BR (or NR or whatever) put a couple of massive pumps in to keep it dry. Go forward a few years and the local woolly jumper group began restoring the canal and, lo and behold, the line stopped flooding again. The original railway builders used the canal as a drain. Now, unfortunately, due to works further up the canal it's stopped draining again and it floods the railway...
Re: Not looking good for HS2
So, you mean the original engineers were very good at their job, they just didn't leave behind the documentation?veravista wrote: ↑Wed Feb 19, 2020 7:57 pmInteresting that piece of track though. It was built after the Derby Sandiacre canal branch, and was fine until some bright spark filled the then derelict canal in. It then flooded to the extent that BR (or NR or whatever) put a couple of massive pumps in to keep it dry. Go forward a few years and the local woolly jumper group began restoring the canal and, lo and behold, the line stopped flooding again. The original railway builders used the canal as a drain. Now, unfortunately, due to works further up the canal it's stopped draining again and it floods the railway...
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