People who prefer a HFR over an HSR solution are not “haters”, but people concerned about how expensive it would be and how long it would take until HSR would have any significant impact on how passengers travel in the Corridor.
In listening to Dr. Haider, I didn't not come away with the impression of his being pro-HFR; I came away with the impression of someone with very little interest in investing in inter-city rail at all.
He clearly identified a preference for investing in regional rail.
I also think he very clearly understated the potential ridership of both HFR and HSR; On the latter, it may well be the price point may not make it the most attractive investment; but if you're underselling the potential achievement irrespective of the financial return (or loss), I'm not sure that I feel his was a fair, impartial or well considered position.
His repeated statements about cutting Ottawa, which you highlight suggest a poorly informed person on this file. That isn't a knock on Dr. Haider's over-all knowledge or ability, but simply to suggest this particular file is not one on which he came across as well informed.
California is still in the process of building itself a monument about the perils of over-ambition and impatience - and we would be better of if we learnt their lesson rather than blindly replicating it…
I'll confess to having a problem with this example. The problem is there are multiple HSR projects all over the world, in developed and developing countries whose costs per km are substantially lower, and whose cost overruns are less substantial relative to budget.
Certainly, the California project has had its problems; and we ought to be mindful of those. But I would argue the problems are not a function of HSR as an idea, but rather the way in which the project has been planned (including its route), and Buy America requirements which precluded SNCF's involvement, among others.
On top of which, they of course face issues w/earthquake mitigation and multiple, significant Mountain Pass tunnels.
I will concede though that the most recent HSR project I'm aware of in Germany more than doubled its initial cost estimate, and HS2 in the UK is tracking poorly as well.
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None of that is to definitively state the case for HSR, or suggest the project as proposed to date ought not be subject to tough critiques; it should
I'm not personally convinced on the way this project has evolved, but I remain persuaded of the theoretical virtue, if done well.
I remain of the view, that Ottawa-Montreal should have been a phase 1 project. It has the greatest potential ROI and the easiest to construct alignment. I also remain of the view that Montreal-QC has no real business being part of this project for the foreseeable future.
The Toronto-Ottawa and Toronto-Montreal segments (potentially, but not necessarily one and the same), strike me as requiring more detailed, and evidence-based discussion as to the costs and trade-offs.
The Canadian Shield route comes with likely lower acquisition costs, and is likely preferable in total track miles to an alternate alignment or alignments.
Alternatively, it poses far more constructability challenges, and serves a smaller population on route with considerably lower secondary regional travel demand.