LONDON, May 19 (Reuters) - The bill for Britain's new high speed railway line, HS2, could climb to as much 103 billion pounds ($138 billion), transport minister Heidi Alexander announced on Tuesday, revealing the latest cost overruns to the beleaguered infrastructure project.
Train services will not start to run on the new track until between 2036 and 2039, with the full line linking Euston in central London and Birmingham not due to be operational until between 2040 and 2043, she said.
That compares to the original plan from 2011 for part of the line to open in 2026 and cost 32 billion pounds. Subsequent plans in 2018/2019 had been targeting a 2033 state date and estimated the cost at 56 billion pounds. ($1 = 0.7456 pounds) (Reporting by Sarah Young, editing by Paul Sandle)
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