First three sections of A9 Dualling to cost over £800m

In excess of £800 million will be spent on the A9 dualling project between Perth and Inverness before the third of 11 sections is finished, the Scottish Conservatives have warned. According to The Scotsman, the Scottish Government has spent more than £520 million on the A9 dualling scheme, with a further £300 million planned over the next two years.

Despite this, only two of the 11 sections have been completed, and the third section, Tomatin to Moy, which was scheduled for completion in 2027, is now not expected until at least spring 2028. Construction has yet to begin for the remaining eight sections.

The SNP first committed to fully dualling the A9 in 2011, with a completion date set for 2025. However, ministers abandoned that target in December 2023 and admitted dualling would be delayed by a decade.

Conservative transport spokeswoman Sue Webber MSP, said the lack of progress is “Scotland’s national shame”, and accused SNP ministers of squandering taxpayers’ money.

“The SNP’s ongoing failure to dual the A9 is Scotland’s national shame. They’ve managed to squander £800 million of taxpayers’ money and still not even a third of the A9 is dualled. The SNP first promised to dual this road 14 years ago but have shamefully betrayed communities who rely on this lifeline road. They shamefully abandoned their initial target, only to put the completion date back another decade.

“Successive transport ministers should apologise to Scots for wasting this eye-watering amount of money. As costs soar and progress stalls, more and more lives are being lost on the A9,”she said

(Pic: Mapillary)

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Print

Related Stories

HIGHWAYS... DAILY

All the latest highways news direct to your inbox every week day

Subscribe now