Urban Sky
Senior Member
I created this calculation four years ago (I thought I had posted it already back then, but couldn't find it when searching through my posts), which suggests that if airlines had to pay the same taxation other motorists (cars and even trains) pay to fuel their vehicles, this would amount to more than $40 million per year in the Corridor alone (i.e. in direct competition to intercity rail):^Those Hansard transcripts that were cited earlier were interesting - at one point a Senator (who was clearly very well primed by the airline industry) made the claim that the air infrastructure in Canada, and specifically in the T-O-M corridors, was self-funding and running in the black. (The inference being that Ottawa is anti-airline if it chooses to subsidise VIA in a way that hurt air travel demand). This may be partly true from some narrow perspective, but investment in the air sector is government subsidised, in the same way and for the same reasons. eg Perhaps GTAA or Dorval is self funding on an avoidable cost basis from user fees, but I doubt the airport in Churchill Man ever will be.
Unfortunately, I didn't really write down the sources (though I looked up all flights on the respective airline's websites), but I did make the following notes:
However, your observation that the airline industry would actively lobby against any subsidised intercity rail project which forms a serious competition to their own business has a very important implication for HSR and that is that the government may probably not fund any project which brings the travel time between Montreal and Toronto under 4 (or even: 3) hours (i.e. into regions where intercity rail becomes highly competitive against the airplane) unless the intercity network already brakes even (meaning that its operation is no longer subsidised). As I've highlighted three days ago (in Post #5,016 ), the dramatic improvement of the financial performance on the Corridor (where the cost-recovery rate improved exactly 10 %-points within 3 years) was driven by a significant increase in train-miles (+9.1%) and seat-miles (+23.2%), thus in scheduled service and available seat capacity or in simpler terms: higher frequencies and higher fleet utilisation.
This makes the case for a medium-scale infrastructure project which is able to make intercity rail profitable by significantly increasing train and (in conjunction with the option included in the current fleet replacement) passenger capacity to levels which allows intercity rail operations to become profitable and attract the capital funding required for HSR. HFR will require an investment of $4 billion in its most basic form, but if VIA's claim of eliminating the annual Corridor subsidy of approximately $150 million currently, this investment would yield a direct return of 3.8%, while providing a significantly improved service to Canada's taxpayers and visitors...
If this line becomes the backbone for Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal, it needs to be futureproofed to permit sensible upgrades over the years. When VIA says, we aren't aiming for High Speed, they are saying, this line has very little upside and is not scalable. That's not sensible.
I have to agree with other posters that VIA has chosen this route because it is the most doable under current budgets, regulatory regimes and public/poltitical attitudes. The reality that the line is unwanted by freight railroads makes its acquisition cheap and easy. We can debate relative construction costs (I accept VIA knows things we don't) but it's the old maxim - never buy the cheapest thing available on the market, it is never the cheapest over the longer term. The next most expensive option is not that much more costly, and it brings greater benefits.
If this line isn't scalable for the long term, just don't do it, at any price.
I understand these concerns, but if we only focus on investments which are HSR-proof, then what can we actually build now to get the frequencies we need? Also, the question of "future-proofing" does not just work HFR vs. HSR, it also works Higher-Speed Rail vs. "full" HSR, as the F-200 scenario described in the Ecotrain study was assumed to be designed for a minimum radius of 2,500 meters (2,000 m with tilting trains), whereas the E-300 was to be designed for a minimum radius of 6,000 meters. As you might imagine, the resulting alignments differ significantly in certain areas (especially: Dorion - Casselman and Napanee - Port Hope)Understanding that HSR is not currently on the table, I still lean to investments which will create the shortest travel time, and which are most compatible with an HSR future.
Note: The F-200 alignment is shown in red, whereas the E-300 alignment is shown in blue and a more detailed map can be found in Deliverable 9 (Appendix I) of the Ecotrain Study
Source: Ecotrain Study (Deliverable 5, p.64)
Given that the infrastructure cost premium of E-300 over F-200 is only 18.6% for Quebec-Toronto ($14.04 billion vs. $11.84 billion in 2017 values, see Post #5,002 for these and all other figures mentioned in this paragraph) or 21.6% for Quebec-Toronto ($9.41 billion vs. $7.73 billion), while reducing travel times between Montreal and Toronto for an additional 51 minutes (2:47 vs. 3:38 hours) or 23.4%, there seems indeed to be little reason to settle for a Higher-Speed Rail rather than a High-Speed Rail future. This is even more the case as two-thirds of the cost premium fall on electrification.
Okay, so let's identify the sections where investments will reduce travel times for the current services and remain "most compatible with an HSR future":Understanding that HSR is not currently on the table, I still lean to investments which will create the shortest travel time, and which are most compatible with an HSR future.
I have identified the need for investment to resolve Coteau in my previous posts. Be that in-situ or with a by-pass.
I was unaware Brockville was a comparable problem but would support the same.
Note: ROW sections eventually shared with HSR are highlighted in green, whereas existing and new ROW sections which will not be eventually shared with HSR are shown in yellow and red, respectively.
Compiled with: distances obtained from historic CN/CP timetables or measured with Google Earth and routings obtained from The Globe And Mail (for HFR) and the Ecotrain Study (Deliverable 5).
You can check yourself, but I can only identify 3 segments which meet both criteria:
- The Montreal Subdivision from Gare Centrale to Dorval Est (14 km, owned by CN)
- The Alexandria/Beachburg/Smith Falls Subdivisions from Casselman West to SmithsFalls North (104 km, owned by VIA)
- The Kingston Subdivision from Port Hope West to Toronto Union (94 km, of which: 60 km owned by CN and 34 km owned by Metrolinx)
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