Northern Light
Superstar
induced demand is a deeply flawed concept anyway.
Yes, new infrastructure induces new use. Of course it does. It's no different than the Ontario line inducing 35,000 new daily transit riders than would exist without it.
Those new trips are new, more efficient economic generators however. Those trips have value. It's more "traffic" and not necessarily great for the environment, but it's better than doing nothing. Doing nothing will just strangle the economy. The whole idea behind induced demand is that a new trip is created because it becomes more economical to make that trip. Without the infrastructure, that trip would have been made in a more inefficient matter (say, public transit or on another road), or likely not at all. Creating more economical and effective transportation is literally the entire point of building infrastructure.
The concept is valuable to compare whether a road project could be more effective as a public transport project, but using it to invalidate absolutely any road project is a silly approach to infrastructure planning. It's a denial of the infrastructure requirements of a modern economy.
Induced sprawl and development has tools that can limit it, I'm not concerned about that.
With all due respect; you've shown a long-term indifference to environmental and landuse concerns in this forum. So be it, you're entitled to your preferences, even if I think and the evidence supports that they have very adverse consequences to the environment and the economy in the longer term.
You're quite keen on sprawl and growth at nearly any cost, and life being convenient for you is paramount in your thinking. Again, that's fine, as far as it goes, but I don't see any room for rational debate between us on this point.
For you, another highway, and another 10,000 hectares of sprawl is just the price of growth and prosperity; even if the truth is that it not only over taxes resources, adds considerable pollution, unaffordable long-term maintenance costs, and produces zero net long-term growth on a per capita, inflation adjusted basis.
We don't need to develop another hectare of land in south-central Ontario and we would do well to take-back some of what we've put down.
We can not only accommodate reasonable population growth within already urbanized areas, we can relocate some existing people from sprawl more cost-efficiently than building an environmentally detrimental highway to serve their inefficient lifestyle choices.
The GTA West corridor is better served by new rail connections than by a new highway, it would have a much smaller footprint and move far more people and goods.
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