Government ministers have earmarked an additional £174m to help build the Lower Thames Crossing road tunnel, fuelling concerns over the “spiralling” costs of one of the UK’s largest planned infrastructure projects.
The proposed £11bn route under the Thames between Kent and Essex is already estimated to cost more each mile than the HS2 high-speed rail link from London to Birmingham, says The Guardian. It was given the funding boost as part of a plan to spend £3.1bn of public money on the project, before a hoped-for injection of £7.5bn by a private sector firm.
The £174m of extra cash will be used to fund public works on both sides of the tunnel and will be found from existing budgets, the Department for Transport (DfT) said.
It was revealed last year that the DfT had taken direct control of the Lower Thames Crossing project, forcing National Highways to relinquish its role as the main agency involved in planning and oversight.
A licence to run the new tunnel and the existing Dartford tunnel about 7 miles to the west is expected to be handed to a private consortium in 2029, offered in perpetuity and overseen by a regulator. The completion date for works is now scheduled for 2034.
The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, and the transport secretary, Heidi Alexander, are both keen to press ahead with the project, which they have said is “vital” and will ease congestion on the M25.
However, the DfT confirmed it has yet to publish an “outline business case”, which would usually be produced before officials embark on large-scale works.
Despite the lack of an initial review document, the government allocated £590m to the project in the 2025 spending review and a further £891m in last autumn’s budget. The £1.48bn total was then given a further £174m boost in RIS3 published in March, taking the total to £1.66bn.
The chancellor described the £891m awarded in the autumn budget as the “the final tranche of government support to enable the private sector to take forward construction and long-term operation”.
The government has spent £3.1bn on the Lower Thames Crossing so far, including significant funds spent on securing planning permission.
(Picture: National Highways)



















