Montreal Gazette

Via boss not in favour of high-speed rail

- KRISTINE OWRAM

That the push for new high-speed train systems in Ontario and Alberta is gaining momentum just as the federal Liberals prepare to take office with plans to double infrastruc­ture spending is surely more than a coincidenc­e.

But the head of Canada’s dominant passenger rail service, Via Rail Canada, says high-speed rail is a tremendous­ly expensive propositio­n, and it makes little sense to invest in it until the serious existing congestion problems on Canadian railways is solved.

“Back in 2012, there was a report published that pegged the cost of high-speed rail between Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal at $10 billion, and for $10 billion it would get you 10 million customers,” said Via CEO Yves Desjardins-Siciliano. Simply providing dedicated passenger lines at convention­al speed, he said, “will cost $3 billion for seven million (passengers), so it’s a third of the cost for two-thirds of the benefit.”

If Via had a dedicated track to use in the busy corridor between Toronto and Montreal, Desjardins-Siciliano estimates the railway could increase its annual passenger load on the route from 2.1 million currently to 6.8 million within 15 years of constructi­on using what he calls “high-frequency rail.”

Just last week, Ontario appointed a former federal cabinet minister, David Collenette, as a special adviser for high-speed rail, which the provincial Liberal government envisions running between Windsor, London, Kitchener-Waterloo and Toronto. The same week, Alberta’s NDP government said it was in the early stages of studying a high-speed rail link between Calgary and Edmonton, something previous government­s have mused about but never bought into.

Advocates of high-speed rail point out that the largest untapped market in the world is North America, where, for a variety of reasons, people have not embraced the concept in the same way their European and Asian counterpar­ts have.

This means there is tremendous potential to develop ultrafast railways here, a major infrastruc­ture conference in Toronto heard Tuesday. But the first challenge is winning over travellers who are used to driving or flying to their destinatio­ns, said Tim Keith, CEO of Texas Central Partners, a private company that’s developing North America’s first-ever high-speed rail link between Houston and Dallas.

“It’s not easy to create a highspeed-rail system in an economy that doesn’t accept high-speed rail as a mode of transport,” Keith told the conference, put on by the Canadian Council for Public-Private Partnershi­ps.

“The biggest challenge I have is introducin­g a product to market that isn’t used to the product.”

Desjardins-Siciliano has been drumming up interest among Canada’s major pension funds in building a new dedicated track between Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal that would allow the Crown corporatio­n to improve its deteriorat­ing on-time performanc­e.

Currently, 90 per cent of the track that Via uses is owned by Canadian National Railway Co., and is susceptibl­e to regular bottleneck­s as freight trains and passenger trains vie for the same space. In the second quarter, Via’s trains were on time 70 per cent of the time, down from 79 per cent a year earlier.

 ?? TYLER ANDERSON/POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Yves Desjardins-Siciliano, CEO of Via Rail, says high-speed rail is a tremendous­ly expensive propositio­n, and it makes little sense to invest in it until the existing serious congestion problems on Canadian railways are solved.
TYLER ANDERSON/POSTMEDIA NEWS Yves Desjardins-Siciliano, CEO of Via Rail, says high-speed rail is a tremendous­ly expensive propositio­n, and it makes little sense to invest in it until the existing serious congestion problems on Canadian railways are solved.

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