Okay, let's continue my
previous post, which at this point has become more or less reduced to a dialogue between
@micheal_can and myself, but let's re-visit that 6th point one more time:
#6 About VIA's mandate
See all the colours? Some are green, some are yellow, and some are red. Toronto to Vancouver i Yellow - Green. That is what I meant. Not the black/red thinking.
Yet,
you wrote "What surprised me was that the Canadian is not in the red." without anything which would have suggested that you were referring to anything I had posted (let alone: to the colouring of my table) rather than using an accounting reference ("to be in the red"). If you want your comments to be understood correctly, be clear on what you are actually replying to...
We should figure out why it dropped.
The cost-recovery rate of the Canadian has indeed dropped slightly between 2017 and 2018:
Compiled from: VIA Rail Annual Reports 2010-2018
However, the more important question is why the cost-recovery of the Canadian increased from 45% in 2012-2014 to 65% in 2017 and there are two main changes in that period: First, the previous federal government off-peak frequency (i.e. between early October and late April) was cut from 3 trains per week to only 2 in October 2012. Second,
VIA Rail launched Prestige Class in 2014. The fact that cost-recovery stayed virtually unchanged after the frequency was cut (during low season) and then increased by 20 percentage-points in only 3 years following the introduction of Prestige Class (with passenger revenues increasing from $40.7 million in 2012 and $47.1 million in 2014 to $75.9 million in 2017), shows that ridership is rather insensitive to a decrease in frequency, while revenues have seen a strong boost from catering towards the higher-end segments of international tourism (by positioning the Canadian as a competitor to cruises). As neatly shown by the figure below, this strategic switch has caused revenues and yield (revenue per passenger-mile) to roughly double, while the costs to the taxpayer (even in absolute figures!) stayed stable and ridership only decreased moderately:
Compiled from: VIA Rail Annual Reports 2010-2018
There is a plan to put HFR between the 2 cities that seem to have the lower ridership. Yet, it is still being suggested, and it is still a good idea. The numbers are not the whole story.
Again, I have no idea what you meant with this statement and especially with "the 2 cities that seem to have the lower ridership", but it becomes quite apparent that you don't trust numbers much...
#9 About expanding transcontinental VIA services
Lets really look at those 4 things.
Fleet
Get more.
Either they locate old ones, refurbish them and put them into service.
Or....
Get new ones. You could have a manufacture, like Bombardier who likely owns the rights to the car designs, build new ones to the original designs, but have them built updated for today.
Now, you would have enough rolling stock to run it daily both ways. In fact, with building new cars, you can replace the old ones. Metal does fatigue over time. Those cars are over 50 years old. That means the metal has been under stress for 50 years. Replacing them with new, but still streamline cars would be a good way to not only increase rolling stock, but increase reliability of that rolling stock.
VIA Rail is already undergoing a fleet renewal on the Corridor (yes, it's a 1:1 replacement of existing seating capacity, at least for as long as HFR is not approved) and there realistically won't be a fleet renewal (let alone: expansion) project for outside the Corridor before the new Corridor trains are delivered, which means that new fleet for non-Corridor services is at least a decade away, possibly much more if the lead time until funding for the Corridor fleet is any indication...
Mandate
en.wikipedia.org
The 4th largest metro, Calgary is not served by rail. The next largest city is the 15th one; Victoria, which actually is if they return the train to Vancouver Island. I would say that Via has not fulfilled it's mandate fully if a major city such as Calgary, with a population over 1.3 million do not have access to rail. The next city that isn't served; Victoria has a population of 350,000. That i a city 4 times as small.
There is nowhere in VIA's mandate which says that cities larger than a certain size require passenger service. A prescribed minimum service level only exists for services which link "communities without year-round ground transportation access" with the next major city (e.g. Churchill with Winnipeg). However, this doesn't mean that the province of Alberta can't fund intercity rail services between Calgary and Edmonton...
Market
Bus =/= Train, or, does subway = bus? The argument for bustification is silly at best.
The only things silly here are your bizzare equations.
The Corridor is still slower than car and plane, but it is well used and well served. Why? Because it exists, and it fills a need.
Because VIA's Corridor services are in fact
not significantly slower slower than the car and plane, and faster than the bus, due to railway lines which are built for speeds in the 100-160 km/h spectrum (i.e. above official highway speed limits). In Western Canada, however, trains are unlikely to exceed 100 km/h and frequent meets with freight trains inflate the travel times to that above intercity buses (before they were driven out of the market, due to lack of sufficient demand to operate them without losses).
So, the market could be there. Again, 1.3 million not served is a fairly good market.
By your logic, a small car like the Smart or a children's book written in German should have much higher sales in the United States than in Germany, because the population of the United States is five times as large as that of Germany. Unfortunately, the word "market" (in the economic sense) is not a synonym for "population" and refers to the volume of transaction demanded by individuals or companies which have a need for a certain category of product or service (in this case: intercity travel) and cities in Western Canada appear to generate much less trips between them than their Corridor counterparts...
Ignoring Vancouver, Winnipeg and Toronto, cities over 50,000 are:
The Southern route would serve:
[...]
Total: 2,028,000
The current route
[...]
Total 1,704,000
A difference of over 324,000 This does not include the smaller places, but the southern route is more populated.
I would say a net higher population is a market that exists that is not served.
The only thing your lists show is that the CP route serves more population centers than the (more Northern) CN route, which is a revelation which will only surprise people who are completely ignorant of the Canadian geographic and demographics (or the routings of CN's and CP's transcontinental lines)...
Funding
This took me about a half hour to look up and type. This clearly shows that a mandate and market do exist. What does not exist is the money, and the agreement to run on CP tracks.
I have clearly shown that which you said did not exist, for the most part does.exist. We just need a government to see this, and put it in place.
No, the only thing you have clearly demonstrated is how little you grasp the challenges which passenger rail expansion efforts face in your country.
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Unfortunately, I only have space to introduce two new points:
#11 About requiring a minimum siding length (equal to maximum train lengths)
I can answer that... yes. The main reason VIA goes into the siding is the trains they meet do not fit.
Imagine you were a corporation with profit-oriented shareholders and the government places a cost (e.g. fines for non-compliance) if you own sidings are shorter than the longest train you operate. Would you a) extend all your sidings to match your longest train length, b) reduce your train lengths to not exceed the length of your shortest siding or c) analyse all sidings which are currently "too short" to determine for which sidings it would be profitable to extend it to be allowed to keep it and to eliminate all other sidings?
Given that the Canadian currently fits in all sidings (even in those where almost no freight train fits), it would suffer most from such a short-sighted and counter-productive law, whereas the elimination of sidings has little negative effects on freight trains which have outgrown them...
#12 About the design speed of Highways in North America
Just you. The normal design standards for freeways in most of North America are 110-130 kph.
Indeed, if Highways in North America were designed for speeds of 160 km/h and more, their medians would be preferred alignments for HSR and other fast passenger rail services. Unfortunately, they aren't:
Putting Rail Lines in Highway Medians
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I'm afraid that's all what I have time and space for today, but to be continued...