kEiThZ
Superstar
If we're talking about costs, I just came across this study (PDF).
Published by OECD and the International Transport Forum, page 10 of 38 says:
Thanks for that. It's good to see some substantive study on the the topic.
If we're talking about costs, I just came across this study (PDF).
Published by OECD and the International Transport Forum, page 10 of 38 says:
But no mode of transport is more dependent on public subsidies than passenger rail in Canada. Not only that....There seems to be no hope of ever spinning off Via like Air Canada. And there is a difference with HSR. When governments build roads, airports, and rail, they design them so that anyone can operate on them. They are built to the lowest common denominator.....ie if your can can hit 100 you can get on the 401. If your plane has the right instrumentation, you can operate in controlled airspace. The government, however, does not build 200 kph lanes specifically for use by a single bus line that only serves Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and possibly, Kingston.
There are a lot of problems with Via, which is why I would not have them run the railway - which is what I would expect to be part of the RFP process. First, cross country passenger rail should be scrapped, second - the federal government should not take the lead -it should be provincial since only Quebec, and mostly Ontario will benefit. In fact, it should be part of the proposal to elimate the federal subsidies of the railway. The only real role for the federal government is to chip in on capital costs - through infrastructure funding. It should not be restricted to domestic either - if an international company can do a better job - let them run it.
An alternative view of HSR:
http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=9753
While I am skeptical of some claims here...he does raise some good questions. Will HSR displace freight from rail? Does HSR actually get cars of the road or does it instead succeed through subsidy, in sinking successful private businesses (commuter airlines)? Who covers the re-capitalization costs and infrastructure maintenance costs? etc.
Read the report. I would love to here some critiques of the arguments he's made.
There's many in line before that one. Electrication of the Lakeshore line is still in the planning stage, and is unfunded. GO has a website that documents the many projects that are actually in the construction phase - http://www.gotransit.com/gotrip/index.asp-I don't know about Montreal, but there's major commuter rail upgrades planned in Toronto. First in line for electrification is the line to Hamilton.
There's many in line before that one. Electrication of the Lakeshore line is still in the planning stage, and is unfunded. GO has a website that documents the many projects that are actually in the construction phase - http://www.gotransit.com/gotrip/index.asp
The highlight being the third track on the Lakeshore line. Union to Eglinton and Burlington to Bayview is now operation, with Port Credit to Oakville to be completed next summer. There have been reports that this will lead to an increase in frequency of all-day service on the Lakeshore line from 1 train per hour (TPH) to 2 TPH next fall - which is a start. Transport for London doesn't count lines as High Frequency until they get to 4 TPH.
But, did Cato consider the positive externalities of having more transportation choices? How is it fair that we have no problem with subsidizing air and road transport (macroeconomically, at least) yet we must insist that rail pays its own way?
Perhaps we should abolish GO Transit and TTC, since they are being subsidized by tax dollars. Let's build the first transit-free city of the world!
As for the Cato report, 1) since the HSR will be built on expanded capacity it should not affect freight rail, and 2) the air industry is already being subsidized, since they don't pay for hidden costs.
If Canada had this attitude in 1870, then the Canadian Pacific Railway would never have been built because it was a massive project which cost taxpayers a lot, and which could not turn a profit from day one (as opposed to HSR in Toronto/Montreal, which likely would turn a profit). After all, who could make money laying tracks through miles of Saskatchewan grassland?
"by Randal O'Toole" nuff said
Though I am an advocate for HSR in the Quebec-Windsor corridor I can admit that the one thing that most advocates fail to do, and is really to the detriment of HSR, is not be honest about a lot of the questions that still surround HSR in a North American context.
Simply put, density matters, and Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec, all cities in the corridor, do not have the density that European cities do and without that density it means that someone who lives in say Markham or Vaughan or Richmond Hill might not find it all that convenient once commuting time is added on too travel time. Not too mention cities such as Hamilton which are effectively ignored, even by basic commuter rail service, and would likely not be a potential customer base for HSR. I bring this up because this is just one good example of HSR advocates leaving themselves open to attack, rightfully so, for not addressing fully a pretty fundamental issue such as potential customer base.
And yes, HSR probably would take a sizable share of the current airline traffic, but is that goal really all that great?
Personally I think HSR should also be targeting highway travel, and though that is harder to do, especially in an auto-centric, North American society, it is really the only way HSR can have an impact beyond a simple modal shift. And currently no HSR plans or advocates have come forward with a plan that specifically targets automobile traffic.
This is particularly true when no political leader is going to take it upon his or herself to push it in a dictatorial type fashion and when economic concerns and wise spending of public money are particularly important concerns at the moment.
Some of his use of statistics is quite poor, and misleading. I haven't really had time to dissect the report, but right off the top the hallmark he uses for HSR energy savings was Florida's proposal, which used Bombardier's jet engine trains.
The main selling point of HSR seems to be Europe has trains, Japan has trains, we should have trains. Even if HSRs cured cancer, I should hope we could think of a few better reasons than 'Europe jumped off a bridge...'
AnarchoSocialist, those issues are more or less addressed. WRT density, there's a number of points to address that -
-The cities in the Windsor-Quebec corridor, especially Toronto and Montreal, are closer to European density than most North American cities.
...
-Finally, I'd argue density is less important than you think. You could make the same argument for airports, that someone in Markham or Scarborough might not find it convenient to go to Pearson and fly from there.
I'm not sure how you'd design an HSR system that focuses on highway travel more than air travel, or what would be different about a system that takes "realities of North American society" into account.