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South Western Railway (SWR) has been renationalised this weekend as part of the government's transition towards Great British Railways.
The train operator officially came under public ownership at around 2am on Sunday - and the first journey, the 5.36am from Woking, was partly a rail replacement bus service due to engineering works. So what difference will renationalisation make to passengers and will journeys be cheaper? What is nationalisation? Nationalisation means the government taking control of industries or companies, taking them from private to public ownership.
Britain's railway lines are currently run by train operating companies as franchises under fixed-term contracts, but Labour have said they want to take control of the lines when those fixed terms end. In its manifesto, the party vowed to return rail journeys to public ownership within five years by establishing Great British Railways (GBR) to run both the network tracks and trains.
Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander, who travelled on the first renationalised departure from London Waterloo, said it was "a new dawn for our railways" and "a watershed moment". "But I know that most users of the railway don't spend much time thinking about who runs the trains - they just want them to work," she added.
"That's why operators will have to meet rigorous performance standards and earn the right to be called Great British Railways." How will ticket prices be affected? Labour have argued cutting off payments flowing into the private sector could save the taxpayer £150m a year. But the government has not explicitly promised the savings made from nationalisation will be used to subsidise fees.
It is unlikely rail fares will fall as a result of nationalisation, rail analyst William Barter told Sky News. "The government could mandate fare cuts if it wanted to, but there's no sign it wants to," he said.
"At the moment, I'm sure they would want to keep the money rather than give it back to passengers. The current operator aims to maximise revenue, and there's no reason the government would want them to do anything differently under government control." What difference will it make for passengers? Britain's railways are frequently plagued by delays, cuts to services and timetable issues, but Mr Barter said nationalisation will make very little day-to-day difference to passengers.
There was "no reason to think" the move would improve issues around delays and cancellation of services, he said. "It's going to be the same people, the same management," he explained.
"The facts of what the operator has to deal with in terms of revenue, infrastructure, reliability, all the rest of it - they haven't changed." Which services are next to be nationalised? In the longer term, the move is likely to bring "a degree of certainty compared with relatively short-term franchises.