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Virgin Group poised to announce challenger to Eurostar after key hurdle overcome

Sir Richard Branson’s company said it hopes to make an announcement shortly about services to rival Eurostar

Neil Lancefield
Monday 31 March 2025 08:41 BST
Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group said there are ‘no more major hurdles to overcome’ before it can begin operating passenger trains through the Channel Tunnel
Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group said there are ‘no more major hurdles to overcome’ before it can begin operating passenger trains through the Channel Tunnel (PA Archive)

Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group has declared its readiness to launch passenger train services through the Channel Tunnel, following a key regulatory decision.

The company said "no more major hurdles" remain after the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) announced the potential availability of capacity at Eurostar's Temple Mills maintenance depot in north-east London.

Access to a suitable depot for train maintenance and storage has been a significant obstacle for potential competitors to Eurostar.

The ORR's announcement follows an independent report commissioned to investigate this very issue, bringing Virgin's cross-Channel ambitions significantly closer to reality.

Eurostar holds a monopoly in running passenger services through the Channel Tunnel , which opened in 1994
Eurostar holds a monopoly in running passenger services through the Channel Tunnel , which opened in 1994 (PA Archive)

The regulator said: “Eurostar’s London depot would be able, if required, to accommodate additional trains.”

It added: “Changes to operational and maintenance arrangements at the depot, as well as possible alterations to infrastructure, would be required to access extra capacity and allow more trains to be stabled/maintained there.”

Eurostar holds a monopoly in running passenger services through the Channel Tunnel, which opened in 1994.

A Virgin Group spokesperson said: “Finally a green signal for competition. The Temple Mills depot is the only facility in the UK which can accommodate European-style trains and claims suggesting it was at capacity have been blocking Virgin from coming to the line.

“Virgin is therefore very pleased with the outcome and we thank the ORR for commissioning this report, which will now unlock competition on the cross-Channel route for the benefit of all passengers.

“There are no more major hurdles to overcome, and Virgin is ready to take up the challenge, given its award-winning experience in the train industry and track record for building globally successful travel brands.

“We expect to be able to make an announcement very soon. Watch this space.”

Virgin Group said earlier in March it was aiming to challenge Eurostar's dominance with a £700 million fundraising effort to launch its own cross-channel rail service.

Spanish start-up company Evolyn, and Gemini Trains – chaired by Labour peer Lord Berkeley – are also hoping to run trains through the tunnel.

Virgin Group was the majority owner of Virgin Trains when it ran domestic services on the West Coast Main Line from 1997 to 2019.

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