The Standard (St. Catharines)

Infrastruc­ture agency hands $1.28B loan to Montreal rail project

- JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — A nascent federal agency designed to find new ways to finance constructi­on of transit systems is making its first investment in a multibilli­on-dollar electric rail system in Montreal.

The Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank will provide a $1.28-billion loan to help build the $6.3 billion system largely managed and funded by Quebec’s pension regime, with interest rates rising from one per cent to three per cent over the 15-year term.

The loan frees up previously pledged federal money for the project, which can now be put toward other Quebec infrastruc­ture plans.

The transit project, best known by its French acronym REM, had been singled out by the Trudeau Liberals as a potential early win for the financing agency, which was created last year to hand out $35 billion in federal financing in the hopes of prying much more than that from private backers to fund constructi­on work.

About $15 billion may not be recovered, while the remaining $20 billion is in loans the government expects to recoup.

The federal finance minister has to sign off on any financing requests.

The infrastruc­ture bank’s first announceme­nt has been many months in the works, even as critics have complained that the agency — and the government’s infrastruc­ture funding more generally — have been slow to get off the ground.

The agency has yet to publish a list of projects it believes are ripe for private backing, but government documents show officials planned to work with provinces, territorie­s and cities to form the list that would provide a five-year time horizon.

“What we said from the beginning is that the infrastruc­ture bank would allow (us) to do more for Canadians and this is what we’re doing,” Infrastruc­ture Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne told reporters gathered at a cabinet retreat in Nanaimo, B.C.

“That’s a flagship project where we think we can attract foreign investors as well and this is our first (project), so we need to talk about it.”

Wednesday’s announceme­nt from the infrastruc­ture agency arrived on the eve of Quebec’s provincial election campaign scheduled to launch on Thursday.

The Quebec Liberals face a steep climb to remain in office after the Oct. 1 vote.

Meanwhile, the federal Liberals’ infrastruc­ture program received another critical review from a parliament­ary watchdog questionin­g spending progress and economic impacts.

A report Wednesday from Parliament’s budget officer estimated the first tranche of money in the Liberals’ infrastruc­ture program boosted the economy last year by at most 0.16 per cent and created no more than 11,600 jobs. Budget officer Jean-Denis Frechette’s report said economic effects from the $14.4 billion budgeted in the first phase could eventually be wiped out if the Bank of Canada continues to raise interest rates.

Frechette also noted that provinces have cut back their planned infrastruc­ture spending — which the Liberals had hoped to avoid — further eroding economic impacts.

Federal infrastruc­ture funding can’t flow to provinces and cities until they submit receipts, which often creates a lag between when work happens and when the federal government pays out.

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