Urban writes:
[a state-controlled regulated monopoly (e.g. France or the UK)]
I'll detail more on the other points later, but this claim is a huge gaffe, as EU Directives dictated the break-up of state monopolies in transport years back.
[
Birth of France's first private passenger transport rail operator
Veolia Transdev and Trenitalia announce the birth of
Thello,
France's first private passenger transport rail operator and, from 11 December next, the opening of the first Paris-Milan-Venice night links from only
35 euros.
"Take the train in new company", that's the slogan developed by Thello, the new rail company created by the partnership signed on 19 January this year between Veolia Transdev and Trenitalia. Courtesy of a comfortable, economical and passenger-friendly solution, Thello offers a real alternative to the existing offers.][...]
http://www.transdev.com/en/media/press-releases/birth-first-private-passenger.htm
And France *is* served *mostly* in passenger rail by SNCF, (freight is quite another story) but here's how complicated it gets dealing with your second case, the UK...which is *anything but* "monopolistic". Quite the contrary...and costing more in operating subsidies than it ever did when it was a monopoly! (BR)
[
Meet the French train giant invading UK rail
The Englishman running French rail giant Keolis's UK business suggests a train operator owned by the British taxpayer should have a chance to bid for franchises - but it will lose every time as long as there is a level playing field]
[...]
Opponents of privatisation have long complained of commercial rail operators creaming “fat profits” from Britain’s railways. Last month, the campaign gathered speed after Ed Miliband confirmed that a Labour government would allow a state-owned train operator to compete with the private sector for multi-billion pound rail contracts.
[...]
The re-nationalisation debate has heated up as the Government prepares to return the only remaining state-run franchise - the East Coast Main Line - back to private hands. Under current plans, Directly Operated Railways, which is owned by the UK taxpayer and currently runs the East Coast line, will next year return to its original purpose of being an operator of last resort. That is to say it will step in only if something goes wrong with another operator - as it was forced to do in 2009, when National Express handed back the keys to the East Coast line.
Keolis is one of three private rail companies that has been short-listed to take over the London-to-Scotland East Coast line from March 2015. It has submitted a joint bid with Eurostar, which has the same majority owner as Keolis: SNCF, France’s state-owned railway.
Although Gordon is keen to point out that SNCF isn’t Keolis’s only shareholder – it owns 70pc of the group – it is one of several companies, along with Abellio of the Netherlands and German-owned Arriva, that supporters of Miliband’s plans use to prove their argument that foreign taxpayers are able to reap profits from Britain’s railways at the expense of UK taxpayers.][...]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...-the-French-train-giant-invading-UK-rail.html
Here is the EU Directive background enabling...*dictating* the above to be possible:
[The
First Railway Directive 91/440/EC (with amendments, also called the "First Railway Package") is
European Union Directive that sets out an
EU law framework and requirements for railways in the EU to allow
open access operations on railway lines by companies other than those that own the rail infrastructure. The legislation was further extended by further directives to include cross border transit of freight.
The subsequent directives 2001/12/EC, 2001/13/EC and 2001/14/EC which built upon the initial legislation are collectively known as the
First Railway Package.
[1] In September 2010 the process of merging the directives into a single piece of legislation was begun; with the addition of modifications to strengthen the regulatory framework.
[2] The
Second Railway Package and the
Third Railway Package aimed to push integration further.][...]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Railway_Directive
Here's a discussion as to France's intransigence to the legislation: (From the US, btw!)
http://digitalcommons.conncoll.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1010&context=econhp
So this brings us back to my asking F as to "what criteria" is he using for comparison of Cdn to European models? Even the US, as discussion has noted, looks at the NE Corridor in different eyes (especially in retrospect, there were massive blunders, and it may not have been repeated today for all it has cost) than the present discussion on the "Quebec C to Windsor Corridor, or segments thereof". I smell big trouble on this, and MD (from memory) proffered UPX as to how these things can go drastically wrong.
The 3.3M$ study will be well worth it even if the answer is "no"....which is probable in my estimation. It's not that it isn't a worthwhile endeavour, it's a great concept, but reality dictates much greater necessities elsewhere.