The proposed alignment for the Inland Rail link as it passes into Queensland (Photo: ARTC)
State Development Minister Dr Anthony Lynham

March 17, 2017

The $10 billion Melbourne to Brisbane Inland Rail project has inched forward with news the Queensland Coordinator-General will help progress a 73km stretch from Toowoomba to Grandchester.

State Development Minister Dr Anthony Lynham said two key sections of the proposed 1710km freight route near Toowoomba had been declared coordinated projects by the independent Coordinator-General.

“The Coordinator-General can now efficiently coordinate the environmental assessment process for the 26km, $1.35 billion Gowrie-to-Helidon and the 47km, $1 billion Helidon-to-Calvert sections,” Dr Lynham said.

“These two adjoining dual-gauge sections could each generate 1800 jobs during their four-year construction phase starting in 2020 and 700 jobs for the 50 years of forecast operation for the entire program.”

Australian Rail Track Corporation is aiming to run 50 round trips between Melbourne and Brisbane each week by 2050.

The route alignment has not yet been finalised.

The project will be built in 13 sections over a route that runs through regional Victoria and central-west NSW.

The rail line will cross the border into Queensland near Yelarbon and then progress in five sections to Acacia Ridge.

Dr Lynham said the inland rail was forecast to reduce rail freight times from Melbourne to Brisbane via Sydney by six hours, as well as reducing the freight task’s carbon footprint by 750,000 tonnes per year.

“This project could be a real boon to Queensland industry, for both growers and manufacturers,” Dr Lynham said.

“However both of these sections will require rigorous planning and engineering to address the potential impacts of flooding in the region.”

Dr Lynham said the Coordinator-General would release draft terms of reference for environmental impact statements in May.

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One Response to "Good News For Rail Link"

  1. “Dual Gauge” is the great Australian joke … just shows how much we’ve moved forward since the 1800s

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