Medicine Hat News

Infrastruc­ture bank eyed for United States-Canada rail

-

OTTAWA A multibilli­on-dollar proposal to connect Vancouver to the U.S. northwest by “ultra high-speed” rail appears to check off most, if not all, the boxes for funding considerat­ion by Canada’s new infrastruc­ture bank, argues a report commission­ed by the Washington state government.

The analysis says the Trudeau government’s $35billion infrastruc­ture-financing tool could boost the likelihood of successful procuremen­t for the project — and improve the chances of the link’s eventual delivery.

The Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank, a key component of the Liberal government’s economic growth strategy, seeks to use public funds as leverage to attract billions more in private investment for major infrastruc­ture projects, such as bridges, transit systems and rail lines.

It has also been designed to consider bankrollin­g cross-border projects as long as they’re partly located in Canada and will bring financial benefits to the country.

That feature of the bank has caught the attention of decision-makers south of the border, including Washington’s governor. Jay Inslee committed US$300,000 to study the “Ultra High-Speed Ground Transporta­tion” proposal.

“The CIB, once fully operationa­l, could provide a potential key source to finance major infrastruc­ture projects such as the UHSGT project,” reads the Dec. 15 report for the state’s transporta­tion department.

The study acknowledg­es that a complete descriptio­n of the requiremen­ts necessary for a project to qualify for funding has yet to be released publicly.

The proposal, which would connect Portland, Seattle and Vancouver, appears to meet the bank’s high-level criteria because, among other features, the project would be in the public’s interest, have a public sponsor and be considered transforma­tive, The authors write.

The report also said the project could satisfy the bank’s financial and commercial requiremen­ts, such as the need for any qualifying project to generate revenue.

“The UHSGT project meets the CIB’s strategic criteria, based on a preliminar­y assessment, and the project could satisfy financial and commercial requiremen­ts for investment. The CIB increases the financing options available.”

On both sides of the border, political leaders and the business community — including high-tech giant Microsoft — have expressed support for the transporta­tion project.

They argue the region, which is experienci­ng strong population growth, has become increasing­ly important for the Canadian and American economies.

The latest cost estimate for the proposal, which aims to eventually see travellers whisked along a 550kilomet­re stretch at speeds of up to 400 km/h, is between US$24 billion and $42 billion.

The goal is to dramatical­ly reduce ground transporta­tion times along the corridor, where a passenger trip by train between Portland and Vancouver currently takes about nine hours.

The study explores different transporta­tion technologi­es that could fit the project, including highspeed rail, magnetic-levitation rail and, although still highly conceptual, a hyperloop.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada