This site provides information relating to the costs of supporting the "Community Rail Network" - that's the small rural lines to you and me.
http://www.transwatch.co.uk/transport-community-rail.htm
It is also scathing in it's comments regarding the lack of cost analysis in key areas of this, the Governments blueprint for the future of the railways!!
Quote:
From the Development Strategy
(A) The network length is now 1,200 miles.
(B) Annual infrastructure costs are £100,000 per track mile – including station renewal.
(C) Rolling stock costs for leasing and heavy maintenance are £100,000 per year per vehicle representing 50-75% of total vehicle costs.
(D) Government cash support for the rail industry ran to £2.6 billion in 2002/3.
(E) Subsidy to Community rail costs approximately £300 million per annum.
• There is no estimate of passenger or freight usage.
• There is no schedule of the track lengths for the routes provided in the appendices.
• The SRA has no idea of the proportion of the network, which has double track formation, i.e. the widths.
• Likewise there is no comparative data for the adjacent road network.
£300 million subsidy, divided by 1200 miles of community rail = £250,000 per mile!!! £684 for every mile of track, every day of the year!!
All those JARVIS and BALFOUR BEATIE vans driving around the country maintaining the track must contribute lots of pollution!!

The site goes on to conclude:
Quote:
Flows
Although not included in the publications, the SRA will say that the 1,300 miles of the Community Rail Consultation network carries 23.6 million passenger-journeys per year.
The network contains 60 lines. Hence the average line length is 21.6 miles. The average journey length may be half that or 10 miles (compared with 25 miles for the entire network). On that basis the Community Rail network may carry 236 million passenger-miles annually.
Dividing by the network length and by the days in the year yields an average daily two-way flow of 500 people, or 250 in each direction.
If the 250 transferred to coaches, each carrying 20 people, 13 vehicles per day, or one half-full coach every hour, would suffice - illustrating the trivial use to which these invaluable rights of way are put. Many of them offer perhaps a 1 or 2-car “train” every couple of hours.