Public Inquiry
Potters Bar Rail Accident Investigation
Status: Completed
Established: May 2002
Report: Apr 2005
Commissioned by: Department for Transport
Investigation into the derailment at Potters Bar on 10 May 2002 caused by a faulty set of points which killed seven people and injured 76.
Historical inquiry (pre-Inquiries Act 2005). Listed for reference — recommendation progress is not actively tracked.
Legacy & impact
The Potters Bar rail accident of 10 May 2002 resulted in seven deaths when a West Anglia Great Northern train derailed at points just south of Potters Bar station. The Health and Safety Executive investigation, published in April 2005, found that the points had become degraded due to inadequate maintenance by contractor Jarvis plc. The investigation formed part of a series examining fatal accidents including Hatfield (2000) and Ladbroke Grove (1999) that collectively reshaped UK railway safety governance. The most significant structural change following Potters Bar was Network Rail's decision to bring routine track maintenance in-house, ending the practice of outsourcing this safety-critical work to private contractors. This reform has remained in place. The accident also contributed to the establishment of the Rail Accident Investigation Branch in 2005, creating an independent body modelled on the Air Accidents Investigation Branch to examine rail incidents. Network Rail was fined £3 million in 2011 for breaches of health and safety law relating to the accident. However, Jarvis plc had entered administration in 2010, preventing prosecution of the maintenance contractor. The Potters Bar investigation, while not a formal public inquiry with numbered recommendations, nonetheless catalysed enduring changes to railway infrastructure management and accident investigation procedures in the UK.