Streety McCarface
Senior Member
Not entirely, they recently took back operations, and likely for a good reason. I've noticed a sharp increase in the number of freight trains through Kitchener ever since they took over operations of the line recently. I highly doubt industry is warranting the increase in rail traffic, so my guess is that they are shifting some of their mainline traffic away from CN's main line. It makes sense, GO is taking up more space through Hamilton and eventually they will want to run even more trains down through niagara & into west harbor, leaving CN dispatchers with less flexibility. Freight traffic is also steadily increasing all over NA, so the extra capacity desires make sense.It's the sort of line that CN would likely happily sell however, just like they sold all the GO lines 5-10 years ago. The line is in terrible condition and has little value in terms of freight customers.
There's also the possibility that CN is wants fewer parties at the bargaining table, having to deal with GEXR, CN, Metrolinx, and Transport Canada seems like a huge headache, especially if CN wants the upper end of any potential sell off.
Believe it or not, but probably thousands per day within the next 20-30 years. Currently, something like 15K people commute from KW/Guelph to Toronto, and this doesn't include the huge numbers of students during their weekly migration. This line gives direct access to the University of Guelph, the University of Toronto, The University of Waterloo, Wilfried Laurier University, and Western University: 5 major Ontario institutes, with a total student population hovering around 150K students. About 3/4s of these students tend to go home at some point in the year for the weekend, so I think it's safe to say that around 30-50K students would use this service in two directions thurs-sun (or about 10K students per day, with Friday and Sunday having peak loads). About 10K people commute to/from Guelph, and giving people in London the opportunity to travel to Toronto in less than 2 hrs probably adds between 2 and 5 thousand additional passengers per day. All these areas are growing, and KW is quickly becoming a huge tech hub in Ontario (housing here is already insanely expensive, giving people the opportunity to commute from London to KW might actually have a huge business case in the next decade or so),How many people are going to take a train from London to K-W as a final destination? This seems like a monorail-like project that no one is asking for.
Of course, most people are still going to drive, so I think it's safe to say that the average daily ridership of this service after opening would be around 5-7K PPD, 10K after a year, after 15K 5 years, and after 20 years, between 30-40K PPD.
Note: those numbers might seem small, but they're actually really big for a typical high speed service. A typical train may only carry around 500 people, so this translates to:
IOS: 10-15 full trains (or one full train every 2 hours/one half-full train per hour)
1Y: 20 full trains (one full train every hour, one half-full train every half an hour)
5Y: 30 full trains (one full train roughly every hour, plus half hour peak service)
20Y: 60-80 full trains (one half-full train every 15 minutes)
These numbers are fairly typical for most high speed rail lines throughout the world (there are some exceptions, notably the tokaido Shinkansen).
Ridership is highly dependent on the pricing scheme. Currently, the Acela Express sees about 12K PPD and is highly profitable, and serves a much more dense corridor, however, it's extremely expensive and adheres only to business, plus they are traveling over much longer distances), while typical northeast corridor trains see an average of 40K PPD. Note, most of the northeast corridor is also traversed by local services (NJT, SEPTA, MBTA, MNRR, MARC, ConnDOT, etc), meaning the ridership potential is a lot less than it could be.