Route utilisation strategies (RUS)

A RUS takes a strategic look at the rail network and its usage and capability in relation to current and future demand. Where shortfalls in capacity are identified, the RUS will identify options for addressing them. These options may involve timetabling changes or investment.

To address the requirements of funders and stakeholders, a RUS seeks to balance capacity, passenger and freight demand, operational performance, infrastructure maintenance and costs.

On this page

RUS recent developments

For current work and completed RUSs, please go to RUS - recent developments.

Licence Condition 7 - Stewardship of the Licence Holder's Network

Condition 7 of Network Rail’s network licence sets out that Network Rail shall establish and maintain RUS’s for the whole and part of the network.

Condition 7 also outlines the process that Network Rail must follow for establishing a RUS and gives us the right to issue a notice of objection. This is an important safeguard in the event that a RUS does not adequately promote the route utilisation objective or does not fulfil the specified procedural requirements.

Condition 7 contains an objective for each RUS. This is:

"the effective and efficient use and development of the capacity available, consistent with funding that is, or is reasonably likely to become, available during the period of the route utilisation strategy and with the licence holder’s performance of the duty".

Condition 7 also requires Network Rail to propose a programme of RUS establishment dates for our approval. Network Rail has developed a consultation process. Each individual RUS is overseen by a number of meetings of industry representatives for the route under consideration.

What we do

We have published Guidance on route utilisation strategies specifying how Network Rail should develop RUSs. Our guidelines identify two purposes of RUSs. These are to:

  • enable Network Rail and persons providing services in relation to railways to better plan their businesses and funders to better plan their activities; and
  • set out feasible options for network capacity, timetable outputs and network capability, and funding implications of those options for persons providing services to railways and funders.

Each individual RUS is overseen by a number of meetings of industry representatives for the route under consideration. We are an observer at these meetings. Wider stakeholders are invited to make proposals for inclusion in the RUS and to attend periodic wider consultation meetings as each RUS is developed.

Network Rail prepares each RUS steered by the relevant Stakeholder Management Group at each of the development stages:

  1. Scoping;
  2. Baseline;
  3. Options; and
  4. Recommendations.

It then publishes a draft RUS and allows two to three months for consultation.

At the end of the consultation period, Network Rail takes account of any material responses and then produces the final RUS, which it publishes and sends to us. We then have 60 days in which to issue a notice of objection to all or part of the RUS. In the absence of such notice, the RUS becomes established. If any stakeholder felt that a final RUS did not address its representations or there were other issues it wished to raise, we expect it to make that fact known to us within 30 days of publication. Please contact us.

Network Rail has developed RUSs for various routes across the rail network. Details of Network Rail's work can be found on its website at Network Rail’s RUS page.

For the latest on RUSs please see our RUS - recent developments page.

Last updated 4 November 2008

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