just east of the creek
Active Member
In some previous studies on ’goods movement’ through the GTA, both rural and urban, it has been recognized that their is a lack of data about where goods move from and to, why, and how their transportation strategy is chosen.
Unless the ‘six’ is giving up eating, drinking, and consuming, a goods movement strategy, which is currently primarily truck based, whether last mile, regional, or long haul, needs to be a primary consideration. So roads and highways. There are not many other choices either rural or Urban these days.
I would argue that the freight movement strategies need to innovate. Yes we have electric vans, advanced signally systems for trains, brilliant logistics infrastructures to handle your prepackaged fruits and salad kits. But that is still all truck based.
I’m not a rail ’guy’ but interact enough with their lack of freight ’service’, to keep thinking that they are well overdue for an upheaval in their innovation thinking, especially on competition with long haul truck freight. The container was one revolution, we need further. And that would be a start.
Unless the ‘six’ is giving up eating, drinking, and consuming, a goods movement strategy, which is currently primarily truck based, whether last mile, regional, or long haul, needs to be a primary consideration. So roads and highways. There are not many other choices either rural or Urban these days.
I would argue that the freight movement strategies need to innovate. Yes we have electric vans, advanced signally systems for trains, brilliant logistics infrastructures to handle your prepackaged fruits and salad kits. But that is still all truck based.
I’m not a rail ’guy’ but interact enough with their lack of freight ’service’, to keep thinking that they are well overdue for an upheaval in their innovation thinking, especially on competition with long haul truck freight. The container was one revolution, we need further. And that would be a start.