This makes sense to me. Working backwards from a sensible position that competes with air and road travel is the only path that I can get my head around.
I'm always so surprised at how stingy politicians and rail enthusiasts are when it comes to Canadian HSR. I think it's wildly overestimated how much the cost of HSR would bother the general public. This is infrastructure that would directly impact millions of people. One of the many studies must have quantified the cost of not having HSR, I have not idea what it is, but if you told me billions are wasted annually on crappy travel between Toronto and Montreal I'd believe it. I have never talked to anyone that doesn't enthusiastically support the concept of HSR in Canada, and I don't live in a bubble. The same is true of my right leaning friends and family in Alberta when talking about rail between Calgary and Edmonton.
The appetite is there for the big project. I don't understand the lack of ambition. This is going to cost many billions of dollars because it's worth many billions of dollars.
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When it comes to the obstacles that get discussed here, like who owns tracks and what route works best.... Nobody cares. People I've talked to all just think its absurd that they can't travel to visit their family in another city like they would in any other developed country. Instead they have to waste time and money and frustration at an airport or on the 401.
The question is not who is eager to see and
ride a HSR train, but who is willing to cough up the $20+ billion to make that wish become reality...
The Shinkansen is estimated to contribute 5B$CAD annually to the Japanese economy before calculating any externalities like carbon emissions or improving the cost of housing. It seems to me that the cost of not doing enough is more than just biting the bullet and getting on with a proper train line.
Almost all of these benefits will accrue at the busiest HSR corridors, which see ridership levels (up to 14 trains per hour, IIRC), which are many times anything we can expect in Canada...
Also... On the note of sleeper trains. I've also always wondered about a car/sleeper train. My parents often ride a popular car train from Virginia to Florida. I could see 2 potential routes in Canada that would make sense for this model during the summer months. Toronto to Halifax, and Calgary/Edmonton to Vancouver. Those are both popular vacation spots where a lot of people drive 2-3 days and stay for extended periods of time in rural and natural settings.
The Rocky Mountains at least have a clear vacation value during winter, but how many people are going to ride a night train between Toronto and Halifax outside the two-and-a-half months of summer school vacation...? Also, whoever is driving such long distances rather than flying and renting a car/van clearly travels on a tight budget and would struggle to afford Sleeper fares (plus car transport fees) for an entire family...
Your comments are quite on the point. So often Canadian Politicians seem to cater to the most vocal and strident yelling of opinion as opposed to actually taking a stand for constructive reasons and showing non-partisan leadership.
We may argue about the route but build the damn thing, just not study it to death as it the norm in this country.
Also agree with your comment re car/sleeper trains and the Auto Train (which is a great and convenient ride). My extension to the comment would be to say that there is so much more that could be done re the Canadian as well. It is a prized tourist train above all and should be treated as so. Time to change the route to North of Superior. Add an Auto Train mix as well and begin to build a better franchise. People come from around the world to ride those cars and experience that story and it’s high time to upgrade our game.
Despite all the conspiracy theories many Canadian railfans will all too happily share surrounding the 1990 cuts,
once we acknowledge that the federal government felt the pressing need to rein into public spending which escalated interest payments on federal debt, it becomes clear why the Canadian ended up on the CN line East of Winnipeg: Because choosing the CP line would have only allowed the elimination of the Sudbury-White River run (annual direct deficit:
$943k in 1988), whereas choosing the CN line allowed to eliminate the much longer (1498 km vs. 484 km) and much more expensive to operate (locomotive-hauled Coach-plus-Sleeper HEP train vs. RDCs) Capreol-Winnipeg remote overnight service (annual direct deficit:
$6.7 million in 1988, i.e. almost seven times more than SUDB-WHTR). (Similarly, choosing CN West of Winnipeg allowed the Skeena to connect with the Canadian in Jasper, rather than extending the Skeena's route by some 300 km towards Kamloops.)
I seriously struggle to identify any indications that this economic and political calculus might have fundamentally changed...
Of course, VIA had an overnight Montreal-Toronto train for many years and I often used to take it (with a bed) when I lived in Montreal but had meetings here. It departed Montreal about 11pm, stopped en route near Brockville (?) and arrived at Union about 7.30. Just time for a good breakfast at the Royal York, a meeting and time to catch the 5pm 'express' home. VERY convenient and far less than a flight.
I would have taken such a night train more than a dozen trains in the last two years alone for very similar business purposes, but the fact remains that the same reason which contributed to the decade-long decline in Europe (though partly reversed in recent years) apply much stronger to North America...
^ One constraint I would impose though is that the plan should use its own dedicated tracks (outside of the GTA/Montreal), lest we fall into the same trap Via has fallen into so many times before, which is to just do a few little upgrades to the CN line and get fancy new trains. Because, sure we can make a deal with CN to run from Toronto to Montreal in 3h59 using the existing line, but the moment the spotlight is off them, CN (or CP) will go back to placing freight trains ahead of Via trains.
I believe we can safely assume that no private company would commit itself to assume any revenue (or other commercial) risks, if it wasn't able to secure a credible and legally enforceable guarantee of operational priority over freight movements...