More Dawlish rail line disruption predicted due to climate change Published duration 22 December 2015 Related Topics Climate change

image copyright Network Rail image caption About 80m (262ft) of sea wall at Dawlish in Devon was destroyed by high tides and stormy seas in 2014

Climate change could disrupt up to a third of rail services travelling to and from the South West within the next 100 years, a study suggests.

The report focuses on the impact of sea level rises on the Dawlish to Teignmouth line which connects Cornwall and Devon to the rest of the UK.

The line was closed for two months in 2014 after it was destroyed by storms.

Network Rail said the study would be "key" to long-term developments.

The report, published in the Journal of Transport Geography, said that 10% of journeys on the line, which was rebuilt and reopened in April 2014 , could be affected by 2040.

image copyright Getty Images image caption The report said there could be 120 incidents of adverse weather disrupting the line every year by 2100

The report said adverse weather disrupted the line about 10 days per year, but according to sea-level predictions that could rise to almost 40 by 2040 and up to 120 by 2100.

Academics from Plymouth University, the University of Leeds and the University of York identified a link between sea-level change and rail incidents over the last 150 years.

The academics said there could be similar implications for other vulnerable stretches of railway throughout Wales, south-east England, the Cumbrian coast and Scotland.

image copyright Getty Images image caption A section of the line was left dangling in mid-air after storms smashed through the defensive wall in 2014

Dr David Dawson, from the University of Leeds, said the long-term future of the line was "really worrying".

The report predicts diverting routes could potentially cost billions of pounds.

Network Rail said it hoped to develop "long-term interventions" to "secure the future" of the line.