Get a loaner of the current trains and use it as a semi-DRL from Weston to Kennedy and see how it works. Find out it's strong points and shortcomings, cost-effectiveness, reliability, and equally important the riders viewpoint. Toronto would have nothing to lose and work with Alstom so they are in charge of operations. By doing this you would be offering some relief of B&Y and crucially will be able to study the technology and it's application first hand so that any informed and reasoned decision can be made. When dealing with such a huge project, hyperbole from either side of the argument serves no one and often result in decisions made on emotions and not logical...........Toronto of all cities should know the danger of that.
A test application is the prudent path forward, I think we all agree on that. This is promising technology and one day we may all own hydrogen vehicles (and automated, at that!).
The issue is this: if we are to meet the goal of opening RER in 2024, we need to procure the motive power and rolling stock
today.
Even a short period of “wait and see” will push that 2024 date further away.
So there are two choices: one is to begin electrifying with proven technology (OCS), the other is to go with hydrail on the presumption that the technology can be made workable by about 2022, when the products will begin rolling off the assembly line for RER.
I’m enthusiastic about hydrail, but it’s just not prudent to take that leap of faith. It’s irrelevant how good hydrail may be in 2028..... we need RER by 2024.
Perhaps we can defer a couple of the lesser travelled corridors, with 30-minuteish 2WAD conventional trains being good enough for another decade. And, not all GO routes will ever be electrified (Hamilton, Niagara, Milton,Richmond Hill, Bowmanville) so it certainly makes sense to look to hydrail for these. But the core investment in the core electrification system needs to proceed -
quickly. Putting that reality in the hands of the bidding process is just evading accountability for making that decision and looking the taxpayer in the eye about what that will cost.
I don’t see any hyperbole in accusing the Wynne government of losing their courage now that the design studies are done and we are at the point of spending serious dollars to procure and build. What a bunch of lying weasels.... all they wanted was a couple years of talking a good line about the
concept of RER. Now they have picked up hydrail and will talk that concept up for two years, until that bill comes due. Sadly, this whole debate has little to do with advancing new technology.
As to the technology, consider this. Fuel cells and battery powered automobiles have been in the game for about the same lenght of time. It’s not dumb luck that we have a growing network of auto charging installations, but not a network of hydrogen stations. It took a pretty broad scientific and business consensus to advance the one and not the other. Mr. Musk could have put his energy into building hydrogen powered cars instead of Teslas. Perhaps H2 is the tortoise and batteries are the hare, and H2’s day will come. But Tesla is a good example of how even good ideas can’t be rushed.
Timing is everything. Our roads are full, and RER is needed immediately. ML needs to buy what is on the shelf today.
- Paul