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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
National
Elias Visontay Transport and urban affairs reporter

Sydney to Melbourne in four hours: meet the man who seriously believes in high-speed rail for Australia

High Speed Rail Authority CEO Tim Parker stands on a platform beside a train at Central Station, Sydney
He’s ready for ridicule of the high speed rail project but HSRA boss Tim Parker believes it could ‘change people’s lives for the better’. Photograph: Blake Sharp-Wiggins/The Guardian

Given high-speed rail’s much mocked history of failed starts in Australia, Tim Parker manages to appear optimistic, even excited, about the decades-long project he has been tasked with delivering.

Parker, a former senior executive at Sydney Metro, was in January appointed inaugural chief executive of the High Speed Rail Authority (HSRA) – the body established to carry out Labor’s 2022 election commitment to build the rail line along the east coast.

Progress has been anything but high speed. It took until June 2023 for the authority to be created, while work on a business case for the initial Sydney-Newcastle section has only just begun.

But Parker – a British transport and infrastructure specialist who has also worked in Hong Kong – paints a colourful picture of his vision for high-speed rail.

For starters, he has much more detail – such as news of tenders being awarded – about the project than his interim predecessor, whose appearance at a Senate estimates hearing in October laid bare the project’s glacial pace and drew comparisons to Utopia, a TV series satirising the absurdity of government bureaucracy.

Parker has prepared himself for when his organisation is compared to one of the best known episodes in that series about this very issue.

Scoping studies, special authorities, targeted surveys … we’ve been there before when it comes to high-speed rail.

“I’m a realist,” he says. “It’s a very good episode, I have to say, having worked in government for quite a few years.

“The way around [Utopia comparisons] is to just deliver, but also to get some excitement back.

“I don’t need to talk about nation building or anything, because this is a fundamental project that could change so many people’s lives for the better … it’s not just making your commute quicker, it’s about moving settlement patterns and creating prosperous cities.”

Grand stations, onboard internet, good coffee and pets are just some of the things Parker wants to see in a bullet train future for Australia.

Building on previous studies

Parker’s authority has a head start thanks to a wealth of existing feasibility studies.

He says a federal government study from 2013 for a line between Melbourne and Brisbane forms the basis of the HSRA’s early plans.

The most recent proposal for high-speed trains between Sydney and Newcastle – the New South Wales government’s “fast rail” plan to go it alone without federal help, unveiled by then premier Gladys Berejiklian before the 2019 state election – will also shape the planning.

Four years after the push for 250km per hour trains on the corridor began, and with roughly $100m spent on feasibility studies, Guardian Australia revealed the Perrottet government quietly abandoned the plan, abruptly halting work on a final business case just as geotechnical drilling was being finalised. The Minns Labor government officially “descoped” the project when it came to power in 2023. No corridor was preserved.

Transport advocates and business groups blasted what they saw as the wastefulness of yet another addition to the graveyard of bullet train studies, but Parker says 24 of the Transport for NSW staff who worked on the state plan have been seconded to the HSRA. He hopes to have a team of about 100 by the end of the year.

“Let’s not throw that stuff away,” Parker says of the NSW plan. “What we’re trying to do is not reinvent the wheel. The reality is, there’s been a lot of work done already; part of our task now is to harness that work.”

The HSRA must deliver a business case and a product definition report for the Brisbane-Melbourne line by the end of the year, funded by $78.8m from the commonwealth.

Land that needs to be preserved to provide a corridor in and out of cities will be recommended in the report. While it’s a tight timeframe, Parker believes it’s possible “because we’re not starting from scratch”.

“There’s people on board who have been looking at this for a number of years,” he says.

The authority is yet to determine the exact route and location of stations, but Parker holds two strong views.

One is that an entirely new, dedicated track should be built instead of upgrading existing lines, such as the proposal that would reduce the existing 11-hour Sydney-Melbourne trip to six hours with minor works. “Those railways are very busy. The Sydney to Newcastle track has 15 million people a year using it. Imagine saying ‘Can I take it out for a couple of months?’,” he says.

His other firm belief is that high-speed services should travel into city centres – a nod to calls for previous projects to build a Sydney station at Olympic Park to avoid logistical headaches.

“I look around the world where all the good high-speed [trains] go, they don’t put the stations out of the way. We don’t have to sacrifice convenience just to make it easy to build,” he says.

Having familiarised himself with Sydney’s Central station during his time on the city’s metro project, he points to the stone wall in a newly opened area, pointing to deliberately manufactured soft spots that can be easily broken through to build a tunnel to a high-speed platform.

“Think of some of the world’s greatest stations, St Pancras [in London], Gare du Nord [Paris]. [Sydney’s Central] has got the makings of a great station,” he says.

A true ‘working’ railway

Parker also has a strong idea of how the trains will operate and what it will be like to travel on them.

Sydney to Newcastle should be achievable in an hour, down from the current travelling time of two and a half hours. A 30-minute trip to both cities from a Central Coast station will also be part of the high-speed service. Future trips from Sydney to Canberra and Sydney to Melbourne should take about 90 minutes and four hours, respectively. Timetable reliability should exceed 98%, he says.

The line will allow for express services with few stops, and eventually high-speed regional services serving more stations, Parker says.

Parker wants “a European sort of dynamic fare model”. Those who want to travel regularly, say, two days a week, will get a discount for booking in advance.

To spread demand outside peak periods, trains will be equipped to be used as mobile offices – unlike current carriages on the Sydney-Melbourne line where window tinting blocks phone reception.

“My favourite line, which I’ve come up with myself, is that in the future your working day will start when you get on the train,” Parker says.

“You can actually have an equitable conversation with an employer that says ‘My working day doesn’t start when I get into the office, it actually starts when I get on the train because I’m in a good enclosure, it’s steady and not rocking around’. You can even have quiet rooms with full wifi,” Parker says.

Parker believes the operator should be private, and if the line is successful, there can be two companies competing.

Good coffee should be available, and Parker is open to the idea that pets will be allowed on the trains.

Beyond Sydney-Newcastle

Labor’s insistence on beginning with the Sydney-Newcastle section of the line means a longer wait for the technology to be ready.

Rail expert groups such as Fasttrack Australia reckon starting with this section risks blowing out costs. Instead, they recommend improving the existing Sydney to Canberra track in sections to allow for fast rail because it is the cheapest and fastest way to deliver the technology and gain support before a costly tunnelling megaproject to the Hunter region begins.

Parker acknowledges it will be difficult starting with the Sydney-Newcastle stretch.

“And it will be expensive. Whilst I’m not belying the technical challenges, I’m an engineer so I say we’ll solve those.”

Parker believes that if corridor preservation begins by the end of the year as planned, shovels can be in the ground on the first section within a couple of years. “I’m not the youngest fellow in the world, [but] I’m also a project delivery person, not a planner, and I think it’s a really good sign they’ve hired me.”

He doesn’t rule out concurrent construction on future sections before Sydney-Newcastle is completed.

Cutting the four-and-a-half hour journey between Sydney and Canberra, and better connecting the capital with Goulburn is on Parker’s mind.

“I think having the capital of Australia not well connected, well, we can do better. What is the potential of Canberra if it had better connectivity?” he asks.

To mitigate the mammoth expense, Parker wants to explore value capture strategies and is open to the idea of foreign investment, including partnerships with countries such as Japan, which has maintained a state-owned rail office in Sydney for decades in anticipation of a local high-speed industry.

Parker plans to provide a “very robust estimate” of costs to avoid the kind of blowout that has become the norm for major infrastructure projects.

But ultimately high-speed rail’s true value can’t be represented in a cost estimate, he says.

“When you look at the dollars, you’ve got to think about 100 years. And it is not going to get any cheaper to defer it.”

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