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The federal and state governments have been urged to consider delaying building the $13 billion Melbourne Airport Rail project over concerns about potential cost blow-outs and low patronage in its first decade of operation.
Infrastructure Australia, the federal infrastructure adviser, also said the project needed to consult more with Melbourne Airport, which it said was blindsided by plans for an elevated “sky rail” station instead of its preferred option of an underground station.
The Victorian and Commonwealth governments have committed $5 billion each for the long-awaited airport rail, which will start major construction next year and run from central Melbourne to the airport in 30 minutes when it opens in 2029.
But in an assessment of the rail link’s business case released on Monday, Infrastructure Australia found more work was needed before federal dollars were poured into the project, which has a budget of $8 billion to $13 billion.
“The strategic need for Melbourne Airport Rail is strong and there will be long-term benefits,” the assessment says.
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“However … we recommend further work is undertaken to improve certainty of the cost estimates, cost escalation risk, and outcomes of stakeholder engagement, particularly with Melbourne Airport.”
Infrastructure Australia is an independent government adviser that is required to evaluate the merits of proposed projects seeking $250 million or more in federal funds.
Its assessment was to not put Melbourne Airport Rail project on its “Infrastructure Priority List”.
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