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The Myth of US High Speed Rail
My Blog - Simply Shrug ^ | July 26, 2010 | PugetSoundSoldier

Posted on 07/25/2010 6:38:48 PM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier

There's a big push in some corners of the US transportation industry to "bring high speed rail to America". Visions of relaxed, latte-sipping trips over the nation, no lines for security, low cost trips are certainly heady ideas, but do they bear out? Let's take a critical, cold, calculating look at the reality of the situation.


As many know, I split my time between the US (Seattle, WA area) and Asia (predominantly Shanghai, China). China's been on a high speed rail building frenzy recently, and there are thousands of kilometers of line laid, with thousands more to come. Soon most of the larger Chinese cities in the East will be connected by high speed rail.

Just yesterday I rode one of these new marvels: the high speed rail line from Shanghai Hong Qiao (a behemoth of a transportation hub, consisting of an airport with two, 3400 meter runways, a bus terminal, a rail terminal, and a subway station) to Suzhou, a small town (well, by Chinese standards: only 6 million people) about 130 km away.

Hong Qiao is massive, even by Chinese standards. Not only are there 75 airline gates, but 36 long distance bus slots, 16 rail platforms, eight taxi stands (each capable of handling 800+ taxis at a time) and a full-size subway terminal. Soaring ceilings and highly polished marble and granite floors abound, and there is a good amount of space as befits China's 4th busiest airport/transportation terminal.

What does one of these new trains look like? Sleek and streamlined, as you would expect from a train capable of 300+ kilometers per hour:

These speedsters ride on some pretty specialized and dedicated rail lines, as you would expect:

Heavily bedded, full-length concrete foundations, and track ties every 20 cm. Absolute rigidity and stability is required for a train capable of such high speeds. And they do move right along:

Yes, that's 323 kilometers per hour, a hair over 200 miles per hour. It's no slouch in terms of speed! Fast, clean, relatively spacious transportation. And the ticket price of 41 RMB each way (about $6 USD) is quite cheap, too - nearly as cheap as the old, slower rail lines (which, at 26 RMB are a good discount, but take 50 minutes to cover the same distance we sped across in just 20 minutes).

So why do I say that high speed rail will not work in the US? One word:

Ridership


You see, I rode train G7130, which departed Hong Qiao on Sunday morning at 7:51 AM. And I rode train G7273 back on Sunday evening, which left Suzhou at 7:18 PM. And in each case, EVERY seat was taken, and it was standing-room-only at the ends of the cars.

Sixteen cars per train. Eighty five seats per car. And another 15-20 people standing in the baggage areas of each car. Over 1600 passengers on each train.

And there are 70 such trains a day between Suzhou and Hong Qiao. And every single one is full. Do the math - that is 112,000 riders per day on a single, 20 minute ride. And it's like that 7 days a week (remember, I rode on a Sunday and still had to buy my tickets a day in advance to guarantee a seat).

Close to 800,000 riders a week. Over 40 million a year on a single line. That's 25% more than rode ALL of Amtrak last year. And this is just a single line (not even the busiest - that title is reserved for Beijing to Tianjin, and Guangzhou to Shenzhen).

There are no discounts in China; you pay the full fare, no free tickets. That's $672,000 per day in revenue on that single train.

I talked a bit with with Wang Xiaoyan, the director of G7130 as we sped through the city. In her trademark skirt, black shoes, neatly pressed blouse, buttoned vest, and cap (with the proudly displayed "director" arm band), she provided a few details to this gao da lao wai (big and large foreigner):

China spent 23 billion RMB (about $3.4 billion USD) to deploy this stretch of track. With ridership of 35 million per year, and operating costs of 32 RMB per passenger, China expects to recover its investment in about 10 years, when the tracks need to be reworked (every 8-15 years you need to rebed and replace the tracks, to account for settling and shifting of the line).

In other words, China's doing this not because they have billions of people to move (which they do), but because it will not be an economic drain on the economy. It will cover its own costs, including maintenance.

Additionally, the construction costs are amazingly low - only $45 million per mile. Thanks to the cheap labor costs in China, and the incredibly flat terrain (Hong Qiao is at 3 meters elevation above sea level; Suzhou is at 5 meters - less than 7 feet difference, and it's completely flat between the two locations) China can build the rail for a low cost.

Consider the recent London-to-Edinburgh high speed rail line - $55 billion for 534 kilometers (note: the distance from London to Edinburgh is 331 miles, but the plan requires 1500 miles of line to make that distance a reality; you need to deploy more than just the lineal distance between locations). That's $166 million per mile, about 4 times the cost of that in China. Deploying high speed rail in the US will be much closer to the prices seen in the UK as compared to those in China, especially when you start to factor in the montainous and varied terrain in the US, as compared to most of Eastern China (and as a point of reference, Seattle's recent Link Light Rail had a cost of $179 million per mile, in line with the UK costs of deployment).

Given the plan for a 17,000 mile (27,000 kilometer) network in the US, we would see costs of $2.8 TRILLION to deploy this network (at UK line prices). A massive outlay of cash, orders of magnitude larger than that planned by China for its entire network (which already is the largest in the world, and growing rapidly).

And ridership will be lower, as well. Consider that a single segment of one line inside China eclipses all rail riders in the US. If we assumed that US ridership would increase by a factor of 10 - 300 million riders a year - and that the lines had a 25 year lifespan before being replaced (about twice what is realistic), we'd see that the per-rider capital costs alone would be $376 per trip. And this assumes 0% cost of money (interest free loans/bonds issued). No financing costs, and a 20X factor in the use of the line and we're still at close to $400 per rider per day in subsidies.

This does not include operating costs, either. Three Hundred Seventy Six dollars PER TRIP. Each of those 300 million trips each year, with a $376 subsidy tacked on.

When you run the numbers, it becomes painfully obvious why high speed rail should be shunned in the US - it simply does not make sense. We have too few people spread over too large an area, with too high of a deployment cost to make this anywhere near a reasonable approach to transportation in the US. It may make sense for a select few tiny lines (the famed NE corridor, for example), but as a realistic national network? The numbers just don't add up.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Travel
KEYWORDS: costs; fantasy; peakoil; rail
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To: Always A Marine

You’re wrong.


41 posted on 07/25/2010 7:58:39 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Grunthor

Easy son. I’m pro train too, just not gub’mint run boondoggle passenger trains.

There is no better mode of land transportation than freight trains. They move all manner of goods, safely and efficiently, and are operated by private sector companies which generate wealth and good paying jobs. They also build and maintain their own infrastructure and pay enormous amounts of Local, State and Federal taxes.

Amtrash and High speed rail on the other hand, are wealth-squandering boondoggles.

Americans want freedom of movement in terms of origin, destination and schedule.

It was the freedom of the automobile and paved highways that killed the passenger train, slowly but inexorably, from the end of WWI to the 1960s.

Air travel only served as the Coupe de grâce, when the Post Office moved the mail from trains to planes and express companies followed suit.

Ever notice that it is the Left that supports HSR and public transit, whether or not a proposed route is needed or desired by the traveling public?

They always seek to restrict individual freedom, and one of those freedoms is to come and go as one pleases.


42 posted on 07/25/2010 8:05:56 PM PDT by Yankee (Welcome to Obama's Fourth Reich.)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier

Great post and writing that flowed easily.

Thanks.


43 posted on 07/25/2010 8:10:47 PM PDT by Vendome (Don't take life so seriously... You'll never live through it.)
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To: Willie Green; Extremely Extreme Extremist; headsonpikes; narses
Nonsense! I've blown your delusional belief in peak oil out of the water so many times, I've lost count. We have nearly 3 CENTURIES of 100% of our petroleum needs (including fuel) right within the Continental US. Peak oil is a myth used by hucksters on the "greenie left" and fantasyland train riders like you.

Not to mention I've proven that vanpools and hybrids are more fuel efficient per passenger mile than trains. If you're so concerned about peak oil and energy efficiency, Willie, then you should support hybrids and vanpools as they consume even LESS energy per passenger mile than your precious trains.

Heck, for the $2.8 TRILLION it would take (at a minimum) to deploy high speed rail in the US, you could buy every family in America a $20,000 hybrid and STILL have money left over. And use about half the energy of your trains.

It's also telling that you don't dispute the costs. Apparently a $400+ per-trip subsidy is A-OK in your world! What could we do with that subsidy? That's a LOT of money - $4000 per weekday commuter, per week. Why not just pay them $2000 per week to stay at home - even smaller fuel costs, and it would be half the price!

What would it take to have the economic impetus to move from cars to trains, given this absurdly high subsidy? Well, assume 75 miles per trip, and let's assume 15 MPG for a big SUV with just a single passenger. You'll use 5 gallons of gas for that trip.

Gas could cost $75 per GALLON and it would still be cheaper to drive than pay for the train.

Face it, Willie: the economic realities simply do NOT bear out what you're pitching. It's economically insane to attempt high speed rail here in the US. You'd have to have gas over $75 PER GALLON, and everyone driving SUVs to even get close to the costs required for your dream.

We have oil (just not the political willpower - yet - to tap it), we have it at a low price, and we do not have the density nor population required to make high speed rail viable. You lose on all counts, Willie.

44 posted on 07/25/2010 8:12:14 PM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Indignation over the Sting of Truth is the defense of the indefensible)
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To: NavyCanDo

Yep. The ONLY time I ride the light rail is when I have a one-day trip on a plane. I drive to the park-and-ride (from Edmonds to SeaTac), and then pay $4 for a round trip ticket rather than $25 to park at the airport.

The two times I’ve ridden it from downtown to the airport (just to see what it was like) it was quite empty, and really not any faster than driving. No park-and-rides was an insane idea - thanks Ron Sims!

Best of all - (un)Sound Transit and METRO canceled bus routes that the light rail duplicated. It’s estimated that half the riders of light rail came from the terminated bus lines. Never mind the bus was cheaper, faster, and more flexible!


45 posted on 07/25/2010 8:16:59 PM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Indignation over the Sting of Truth is the defense of the indefensible)
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To: jonascord
What's even more interesting is that in the so-called Silicon Valley, Adobe Systems, Google, Apple, Yahoo!, and Cisco Systems are all within 20 minutes' drive of San Jose Mineta International Airport. Who wants to put their corporate headquarters in San Francisco?
46 posted on 07/25/2010 8:17:17 PM PDT by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's economic cure)
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To: Recon Dad

They’d come in a heart beat, build it better faster and cheaper. I have more confidnece in them than lazy UNIONS.


47 posted on 07/25/2010 8:18:09 PM PDT by nmh (Intelligent people recognize Intelligent Design (God).)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier
And here's another thing that blows the Peak Oil idea away: we can soon make gasoline, diesel fuel and kerosene from oil-laden algae almost as cheap as extracting it from crude oil. And since oil-laden algae is a renewable resource, it means within 20 years there'll be no such as as Peak Oil anymore!
48 posted on 07/25/2010 8:21:06 PM PDT by RayChuang88 (FairTax: America's economic cure)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier
Nonsense! I've blown your delusional belief in peak oil out of the water

I rarely agree with you, but I have to back you on all your points here. Sadly, Willie has issues with false gods and government control.

"DC" rail is also high maintenance to prevent damage to every other buried (pipeline) structure in the vicinity.

The only place I see any viability of HSR is on major airline hubs. Maybe, Philly to NYC, Boston to NYC, NYC to Chicago are economically viable. Economic viability means private funds and turning a profit.
49 posted on 07/25/2010 8:25:48 PM PDT by PA Engineer (Liberate America from the occupation media.)
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To: Recon Dad

You want some Chinamen to build our railroads again?

There were stories of the chinese doing blasting and they would be lowered to place the charge and light it and then get haulded back up while it exploded. They tried lowering after lighting but the explosion blew the rope in two and they lost a basket.


50 posted on 07/25/2010 8:32:08 PM PDT by bray (Did Rush say Absolute Failure?)
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To: Willie Green; Always A Marine
You’re wrong.

The strength of your argument is simply overwhelming. Your loquacious delivery is unimpeachable!

51 posted on 07/25/2010 8:33:33 PM PDT by PugetSoundSoldier (Indignation over the Sting of Truth is the defense of the indefensible)
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To: Willie Green
You’re wrong. I'll bite. How so? LOL! Good luck to ya. Back it up, willie. It would be a first.

I love your die-hard attitude in the face of overwhelming relaity. Keep it up, some day, like that poor little 9-year old kid trying to hit the first ball off the tee while all his buddies are playing real 7-inning games and have actual batting averages, you HAVE to get SOMETHING right somewhere in your incessant HSR proponency.

Keep swinging, Junior, you might just hit it.

Too bad facts are hard to overcome.

52 posted on 07/25/2010 8:34:56 PM PDT by Travis T. OJustice (I can spell just fine, thanks, it's my typing that sucks.)
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To: Recon Dad

Hamtramck in no longer a Polish neighborhood. It is MUSLIM enclave with a call to prayer at the proscribed hour.

The only thing I would want to stop there would be a small thermonuclear device.


53 posted on 07/25/2010 8:40:31 PM PDT by wetgundog (" Extremism in the Defense of Liberty is no Vice")
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To: Grunthor
I am pro-railroad, but not in the terms of WillieGreen. Steel wheels on steel rails is the most efficient mode of transportation... and unlike the interstate highway system, railroads are private, for-profit companies. If they could make money hauling passengers, then they would be doing it.

Oh, did I mention that I am pro-railroad but not on WillieGreen's terms?

54 posted on 07/25/2010 8:52:26 PM PDT by Rodamala
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To: PugetSoundSoldier
More untapped potential energy
55 posted on 07/25/2010 8:59:17 PM PDT by Sgt_Schultze (A half-truth is a complete lie)
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To: Willie Green
Dipstick.

Virtually everyone on FR can add except you. Any plans for acquiring that skill?

Well, we'll see. Meantime, due at minimum to your economic incompetence, why not apply for a job with your HE-E-E-RO, Zerobama?

56 posted on 07/25/2010 8:59:23 PM PDT by SAJ (Zerobama -- a phony and a prick, therefore a dildo.)
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To: PugetSoundSoldier

After looking over the postings on this topic. Yes, a train would be nice but, here in the good old USA, we are spread out. Now living in Colorado, a train might work for the front range (I-25 corridor) and from Denver to the mountains (I-70 corridor). I live in Colorado Springs and it owuld be interesting to go to Tiffany Square by I-25 and Woodman Rd and hop on the train and go up to Denver. Tiffinay Square is close to my house that it would take about 10 to 20 minutes to ride my bicycle from there to the station or on a bad weather day, drive and park and hope my car doesn’t get broke into.

No worry about dealing with driving to Denver such as speeding tickets, left lane hogs and there are many ! Get on the train and enjoy the scenery !


57 posted on 07/25/2010 9:10:17 PM PDT by CORedneck
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To: Willie Green

Known reserves at present rates of consumption are out 50 years, or more. The US has maintained a 3 year, world wide consumption for decades.

You don’t mean ‘Peak Oil’. You mean ‘Political Oil’. Yeah, that we could run out of. As Nobel economist Milton Freidman said, ‘If the government was in charge of the Sahara, we would have sand shortages in two years’”.


58 posted on 07/25/2010 9:51:34 PM PDT by Leisler ("Over time they create a legal system that plunders and a moral code that glorifies it." F. Bastiat)
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To: LukeL
I take a bus to my university for class and I hate every minute of it.

Back in the sixties I used to take a four hour bus ride between RI and the NY Port Authority station, and I hated it. I inquired at the train station and found that it cost as much as flying, so I tried flying. This was actually my first plane flight ever, and it was on a turboprop. Of course, it took longer than the bus when you added everything up, so I went back to the bus. I remember it all very well.

I also remember my Mom telling me about the WWII days when they rode from Philly to South Carolina standing up on the train, which was of course packed. That's all there was then, and this is what it would take to pack the trains - the elimination of all other forms of transportation.

59 posted on 07/25/2010 9:56:10 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: dr_lew

Also pre 1950s all you had were rural roads, there were no freeways.


60 posted on 07/25/2010 10:25:45 PM PDT by LukeL (Yasser Arafat: "I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize")
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