Northern Light
Superstar
To where?
There are certainly proposals, particularly with respect to mineral extraction, but the huge costs need to align to the projected output and demand/price for the commodities to be shipped. And there has to be the prospect for sustained operation over a very long time frame…. Which mining often can’t guarantee.
The original railway building era from 1880 to 1920 led to a far overbuilt natuonal network - many of those old lines weren’t really needed even back before the highway network was built. Lots of lines that never broke even and were lucky to see a train a day. Today’s investment community eould never get behind some of those business cases.
One can argue that we allowed our network to be pared too far - but I don’t see much appetite for restoring much of what we lost.
- Paul
I tend to agree.
I think one might hold out some reasonable hope for restored passenger services in some corridors, over time, likely on track shared w/freight, or at least in the same corridors.
But outside of HSR/HFR possibilities in southern Ontario/Quebec, and perhaps, one day, between Edmonton-Calgary, its difficult to imagine the case for much large-scale building of new corridors.
To my mind, I can only think of 2 significant spots that might be tempting in different ways; and the business case would likely be challenging in either for the foreseeable future.
One is an alternate route connecting both the CN and CP mainlines from central/northern Ontario to Quebec, bypassing the southern Ontario area.
Redundancy is the best argument here, but plausibly, with a direct enough route, there might be enough travel time saving to be interesting.
The other argument would be for a corridor roughly in the Barrie area to Guelph/K-W/Brantford/London alignment. ( I realize I'm being open-ended here) but the logic from a freight perspective
is again a shorter route between mainline segments, and bypassing any GTA congestion, by connecting both CN/CP mainlines from near Barrie to their mainline connections to the U.S.
The ancillary case for this is that there is some passenger demand that can be met in this segment as well; and that removing traffic off MacTier and Bala near the GTA would perhaps free up room for passenger services on those corridors.
Still, the case isn't overly strong for such investment in the near-term.
Serving smaller markets seems mostly unlikely; though I remain of the opinion that there probably is a good market for a Blue Mountain/Wasaga service in the medium term, which could also
serve as commuter rail to Barrie on weekdays.
But again, no question, such would almost certainly require both capital and operating subsidies.
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