£1.5m of compensation claims paid out by ScotRail since nationalisation

The operator says the majority of the delay claims are made due to circumstances outwith its control

Published 12th Mar 2024

More than £1.5 million has been paid out in compensation by ScotRail since the service was nationalised, according to new figures.

The rail service was brought into public ownership in 2022 after a slew of failings by former operator Abellio.

Figures released to the Scottish Tories under freedom of information legislation showed a total of £1,526,649.92 was paid out since April 1 2022 as a result of delays, cancellations or disruptions.

It is understood, however, that £1 million of the compensation claims were made due to issues outwith the operator's control.

'Taxpayers are footing an enormous bill'

Scottish Tory transport spokesman Graham Simpson described the level of compensation as "absolutely staggering" and called for the Scottish Government to come up with a plan to improve the country's railway.

"Taxpayers are footing an enormous bill as a result of the SNP typically overpromising and underdelivering," he said.

"Nicola Sturgeon and other senior SNP figures promised a bright new future for our railways under nationalisation, but the exact opposite has occurred.

"Suffering passengers have had to endure endless delays, cancellations and disruption to services as a result of the overwhelming failures from successive SNP transport ministers.

"Within weeks, journeys had been axed and an emergency timetable had to be put in place."

He added: "Given Fiona Hyslop now has a sole focus on transport in the SNP cabinet, she must urgently outline a real vision for the rail network.

"She should be pulling out all the stops to encourage people onto public transport and to reduce these compensation payments."

'Absolutely committed'

Phil Campbell, director of customer operations for ScotRail, said the operator was "absolutely committed" to delivering the best service, adding: "The number of compensation cases paid since April 1 is equal to just 0.07% of almost 126 million customer journeys and the overwhelming majority of those claims related to incidents outwith the control of ScotRail.

"These include severe weather resulting in disruption or line closure and infrastructure issues or track improvements.

"It is always unfortunate to see any disruption across the rail network and we know this is frustrating for ScotRail customers, and everyone at ScotRail is working hard to ensure reliability and performance of our services."

A spokeswoman for Transport Scotland said: "Rather than make misinformed comments about past disruption - particularly when blame for over £1 million of the compensation lies elsewhere - we are focused on ensuring the publicly-owned ScotRail is a success."

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