Transport Minister Marc Garneau was in Lachine Tuesday to announce the award of a $ 46 million contract to CAD Industries for the repair of 25 cars.Last week, VIA Rail selected Bombardier for the refurbishment of 17 cars at a cost of $ 54 million.
"These cars are stainless steel, they will have decades of life ahead of them with the refurbishment," Garneau said. They ride on the Toronto-Vancouver and Montreal-Jonquière lines.
On the other hand, trains running between Quebec City and Windsor, the 97 "LRC" cars built by Bombardier from 1981 to 1984, and the 47 "Renaissance" cars from 1995-1996 bought in the United Kingdom in 2000, can not be modernized.
security
"These cars are coming to the end of their lives," said the minister. They must be replaced for security reasons. "
The recent federal budget gave VIA Rail the go-ahead for a tender that is likely to exceed $ 1 billion. The new cars will not be able to run at high speed, Ottawa having put this old project on the ice.
They must be put into service between 2022 and 2024. Bombardier Transportation, which operates plants in La Pocatière and Thunder Bay, is far from assured of getting their hands on the money.
"It will be open," noted Marc Garneau. When it's a contract run by a crown corporation, the Government of Canada has to make the call for tender internationally, that's part of our obligation to not only the NAFTA, but also from the World Trade Organization. "
As new
In the case of old stainless steel cars, VIA Rail has contracted Bombardier to repair 17 of them, which will be completely transformed to become accessible to passengers with reduced mobility. CAD will repair less complex 25 cars whose interior will still be completely redone and will have a wi-fi system.
"They will be like new at the end," says CAD CEO Fausto Levy. According to him, it costs half as much to renovate old cars as to buy new ones.
The VIA Rail workshops in Pointe-Saint-Charles will be responsible for the renovation of 33 other cars at an undisclosed cost. It will then remain the rehabilitation of "sleeper cars and dining cars".
CAD has some 400 employees in Lachine and 150 in Toronto, Oshawa and Calgary. In 2015, the Japanese conglomerate Sojitz acquired a 41% stake in the company founded 50 years ago.