Please provide current version of FoI released document
Request ID: FOI-1754-1718
Date published: 18 September 2018
You asked
A document 'operations & maintenance concept' was released on 13 July 2017 in response to a FoI request headed Driverless Trains. It was dated 20 July 2016, and states that a significant update is planned for February 2017. Please provide the latest version of this document.
We answered
TfL Ref: FOI-1754-1718
Thank you for your request received by Transport for London (TfL) on 5 October 2018 asking for an updated version of our 'Operations and Maintenance Concept' report.
Your request has been considered in accordance with the requirements of the Freedom of Information and our information access policy. I can confirm we hold the information you require. Please accept my apologies for the delay in our response. You asked for the following:
A document 'operations & maintenance concept' was released on 13 July 2017 in response to a FoI request headed Driverless Trains. It was dated 20 July 2016, and states that a significant update is planned for February 2017. Please provide the latest version of this document.
Please find attached a copy of the ‘Deep Tube Upgrade Programme (DTUP) Operations and Maintenance Concept report’, from May 2017. The document history, and a summary of the changes from the previous version, are given on pages 2-4.
As mentioned previously in our response given under reference: FOI-2450-1617, in accordance with the FOI Act, we are not obliged to supply some of the information contained within this document as it is subject to a statutory exemption to the right of access to information under section 43(2).
This document is an “Operations & Maintenance Concept” which examines how degrees of further automation could work on our network. The purpose of the document was to inform equipment design, and does not form the basis for any proposed changes to the way we operate our services. This document originated during the previous Mayoral administration and was used to inform the procurement process for new trains, which is currently underway, with the aim of awarding the contract in Spring 2018.
In this instance the exemption has been applied as disclosure of the information you have requested could impact our negotiation in current and future discussions with the trade unions and so would be likely to prejudice our commercial interests. The information redacted includes proposals around future potential operation which were produced during the previous Mayoral administration. While the document retains an internal use for future consideration, there is a significant risk that disclosure of these proposals and considerations on this subject would lead to our commercial interests being harmed through a more fractured negotiating position with unions both now and in the future.
The use of this exemption is subject to an assessment of the public interest in relation to the disclosure of the information concerned. We recognise the need for openness and transparency by public authorities, but in this instance we feel the balance of public interest lies in favour of withholding the information to ensure that we are able to negotiate effectively with the trade unions without being hindered by the release of information which may or may not become realistic objectives for the organisation.
Additionally, in accordance with TfL’s obligations under the Data Protection Act 1998 (DPA), some personal data has been removed, as required by section 40(2) of the FOI Act. This is because disclosure of this personal data would be a breach of the DPA, specifically the first principle of the DPA which requires all processing of personal data to be fair and lawful. It would not be fair to disclose this personal information when the individuals have no expectation it would be disclosed and TfL has not satisfied one of the conditions of Schedule 2 of the Data Protection Act which would make the processing ‘fair’.
More broadly, in terms of our plans for future improvements to the Tube network our focus is on increasing the capacity and frequency of services, and putting the needs of customers at the heart of everything the Tube does.
To do this we need to modernise our existing infrastructure. We are progressing with plans to upgrade the Piccadilly, Bakerloo, Central and Waterloo & City lines, with the next generation of Tube trains. These trains, with new signalling technology, will allow us to run more trains, faster and closer together, while also improving reliability.
The new trains will be more energy efficient and easier to maintain. They will also have a number of features which will make them safer and more comfortable in future. For example, they will be air-cooled, provide improved customer information and have walk-through interiors. As well as providing greater capacity and reducing temperatures in the warm summer months, this will ensure the trains are easier to evacuate, should that ever be necessary.
The starting point for us is the Piccadilly line, where we plan to deliver a major improvement to capacity from 2026, with new trains serving the line from 2023. On the Piccadilly line we can deliver the 60 per cent capacity increase while running the trains the same way we do on the Victoria, Jubilee and Northern lines, where trains are under automatic control, with a driver on board controlling the doors, and able to take manual control when necessary.
The new trains will be capable of full automation. As these trains will serve London for at least 40 years, it makes sense to future-proof their design. However, the trains will continue to have a driver on board.
Throughout the development and procurement of these new trains we will work closely with customers, stakeholders, trade unions and staff to understand how to make the most of the new technology.
If this is not the information you are looking for, or if you are unable to access it for some reason, please do not hesitate to contact me.
Please see the attached information sheet for details of your right to appeal as well as information on copyright and what to do if you would like to re-use any of the information we have disclosed.
Yours sincerely
Jasmine Howard
FOI Case Officer
Information Governance
Transport For London
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