High-Speed Rail Key to Infrastructure Renewal
By Nick Gier, Unfiltered 2-04-09
HIGH-SPEED RAIL IS KEY TO INFRASTRUCTURE RENEWAL
By Nick Gier (nickgier@roadrunner.com)
The U.S. will not be able to compete in the world economy without a substantial rebuilding of its infrastructure. Our great success in the last century was due not only to individual initiative and innovation, but also to government investment in railways, roads, and waterways.
In 2005 America’s civil engineers gave the nation’s infrastructure a “D” grade, and they estimated that it would take $1.6 trillion over five years for proper upgrades. Only about one third of Obama’s $825 billion stimulus package will go to infrastructure with only $30 billion for roads and a mere $10 billion for mass transit and railways.
Currently China invests 9 percent of its gross national product in infrastructure, European nations lay out 5 percent, but the U.S. gives only 2.4 percent. The last major project was the interstate highway system, initiated by President Eisenhower at a cost of $400 billion in today’s dollars.
The federal gas tax, the main source of revenue for road building and maintenance, has not been raised since 1993, and the Highway Trust Fund is $4 billion in debt.
Europeans pay much more in fuel taxes: the Brits pay 50 cents per liter while we pay only 8 cents per liter. High European fuel taxes pay for good roads and superb public transportation, including some of the fastest trains in the world. Amtrak’s Acela train averages only 79 mph between New York and Washington, while the EuroStar between London and Paris averages 136 mph.
When I traveled to Japan for the first time to give some lectures in 1983, I could not wait to ride on a “bullet” train. As I stood on the platform at Tokyo’s main station, I was amazed to see these high-speed trains departing for every major city within minutes of each other. In 1983 the bullet trains’ top speed was 130 mph, but when I went back in 2002 I was sometimes moving along at 186 mph.
Japan’s bullet trains first began operation in 1964, and after forty-five years of service, there have been no deaths, no major injuries, and only one derailment, which was caused by an earthquake in October 2004. In stark contrast, from 1997-2003 Amtrak accidents killed 96 and left 1,328 injured.
Drawing on Japanese and European technology, China is now building its own bullet trains. By 2012 new tracks between Beijing-Shanghai will carry passengers at 236 mph and consume only 12.7 KW per passenger, the most energy efficient public travel in the world.
California is leading the way with high-speed rail. Voters have approved tens of billions of dollars in bonds, $9 billion alone for a Los Angeles-San Francisco line that would reduce travel time to 2.5 hours.
It is estimated that 160,000 construction jobs would be created with 450,000 permanent jobs by 2035. Moving Californians out of their cars would save $12.7 million barrels of oil per year, and 12 billion fewer pounds of carbon dioxide would be released into the air.
President Obama’s long-range plan is for an infrastructure investment bank, whose capital would be raised on the basis of 3 private dollars to one federal dollar. It is estimated that 47,500 jobs will be created for every $1 billion spent.
The most unfortunate fact, however, is that the turbines for our wind farms will have to be imported from Denmark and the bullet trains most likely will come from China. The greatest manufacturing economy in world history has now taken second place to a nation that, only 50 years ago, was a poor peasant society.
It did not have to be this way. With better industrial planning, taboo among free marketeers, the U.S. could still be a world leading in making the things that the world needs.
Nick Gier taught philosophy at the University of Idaho for 31 years. Read or listen to all his columns at www.NickGier.com.
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Comments
this is just made up disinformation from Rich NIMBYS that want to stop a much needed infactructure project that will give us competive edge for business and travel. They LOST ..WE voted YES ON1A
This article is right on the mark. I’m a Graduate student about to obtain my Master’s in Transportation & Logistics and read about this stuff all the time. This country seriously needs to look at its transportation network. We are dead last when it comes to our mass transit systems.
@Martin: high-speed rail is a generally good idea, it can compete with air and road travel in some cases if properly planned and managed. CA high-speed rail probably won't run for $100 billion, but...
@Glen: It will run over the current budget, prop. 1A only gave the program some of the program's estimated total budget, the plan is to seek private investment and use bonds to get the rest.
@ article author/Michael: DO RESEARCH! The US federal government has mismanaged the rail industry massively over the past century. exccessive labor rules, unadaptable legislation, and stiff taxes all helped bring down private rail transport. Lobbying by big oil and the auto companies had a lot to do with it as well. The government shouldn't be in charge of high-speed rail because it's a potentially profitable sector that can compete with air and road travel if managed properly.
Government officials aren't good at managing these things because they don't have an incentive to do it well, only to keep the voters contented, and if runs over budget they can just raise taxes or print more money (the latter is less desirable because of inflation). hisgh-speed rail can compete and even earn a profit, so the private sector should get to manage it since they'll do the best at keeping it efficient.
The author could have done more, but that wasn't the purpose of the article. Hes not writing a study he simply stating some facts. And of course you can find statements that go against all of this as well. But in reality were way behind. I think that's pretty obvious.
the author doesn't even use that many facts and he makes the claim using basically the cliched defense for HSR a lot of other journalists have made. Part of the problem is that it just repeats the same things lots of other articles have said but doesn't explain any of the new assertions.
Only if fuel is a kajillion bazillion dollars a pint would rail be competitive on this landscape, only if we had a kajillion bazillion PEOPLE would it work, and only if those kajillion bazillion people still had JOBS would it work.
There might be a need for HST service in California, in the Northeast Corridor, and MAYBE to St Louis from Chicago across to KC, perhaps along the east coast of Florida. But you simply HAVE to have the population density, AND a reason for people to travel. I don't see it.
I can think of a recent article in Trains Magazine, I believe its the March 2009 article. It's titled "Trains' formula for fixing Amtrak" by Rush Loving Jr. Check it out if you can its a really interesting read. I've been interested in railroads just my whole life so I have read a lot of books and followed the business, even more closely now days. If you search around and read about the history of Amtrak I think you'll find it pretty fascinating. (Side Note) Amtrak was designed to fail a few years after it was formed thanks to Nixon. Even today Congress cant think long term for Amtrak, which is why it cant operate sufficiently. They keep putting band-aid fixes on it instead of planning a future for it or scrapping it altogether.
Also, Union Pacific just turned down an offer from California to help pay for track expansion over Donner Pass. The reason UP turned it down, is because California wanted to eventually share the tracks with UP to run Passenger trains. Believe me, today's freights don't want anything to do with passenger service. But please read more on the creation of Amtrak and you'll find this to be true.
Dave Skinner: Very True. The U.S. is built much differently than other countries who rely on HSR. Southern California is a perfect example of this. But I do think HSR can serve corridors in many parts such as the Northeast Corridor.
San Francisco is the 2 most dense city in the USA..800,000 in 49 square miles ..a small area. This might be the only 2 city pairs where true HRS makes sense. At least here in Cali well give it a try.. PS I normally dont post on out-of -state sites but it came up on my google news and I read the very first post which happens to be from someone that lives in California and post anti HSR post anywhere they can
A reader e-mailed me and said that it was unfair to include Amtrak accidents that include dumb drivers, so appended below are the revised passages that will appear on my website.
By the way, the time period was 93-03, not 97-03, and the correct figure for road construction in the stimulus package is $28 billion, but that might change tonight as the Senate votes and then it goes to House-Senate conference.
"In stark contrast, from 1993-2003 Amtrak accidents killed 18 and left 754 injured. All these accidents were the result of derailment or crashing into other trains. If people killed and injured at crossings are included, the numbers rise to 48 and 1,250 respectively.
Some say that is unfair to Amtrak to include careless people in these figures, but it is not their fault that our rail crossings are not nearly as safe as those in Japan and Europe. Unlike Amtrak, Japanese bullet trains run on dedicated double tracks that never mix with freight trains, never cross a road, and are checked for alignment every night."
The Western water right is usually 2.5 acre feet per acre of irrigated land. That is a little over 800,000 gallons of water. If you build homes for 8 families on that acre, using a mix of single and multiple family dwellings, you might have 8 per acre. Essentially 100,000 gallons of ag water per family. The current southern California use rates are about 180,000 gallons per household per year. That sounds like a lot of water, but when you account for all the ancillary water use that many need (schools, public buildings, access to food, health care and recreation, ad nauseum) you soon find out that ag was a far less impact on watersheds than human development. And when you convert ag land to housing, the ag water will only provide half of current household use.
My point is that high speed connectivity will increase sprawl, and diminish agriculture and watershed needs, not improve them. I see, in the high speed transportation issue, just another water issue for down the road. Where do we get the water to put people to work and live in what is and has been a desert, as is a preponderance of California developed areas? Las Vegas and Phoenix are two high growth areas, or were before the liar loan and subprime implosion. Neither place is fit for humans 4 or more months of the year. I remember my parents loving living in Arizona in winter, but I also remember Dad saying it cost him $300 a month when they were gone in summer, whether to travels or an apartment in a Northwest college town, to keep the temperature of their Arizona home at 88 degrees...That much energy expended to cool the house in those months so it would not melt stuff. Of course, they had no landscaping that used water from the tap. Monsoonal water or die. Where they lived was highly productive ag land when Dad was stationed at Luke Field during WWII. The ag water is gone, the Colorado River dry, and Lake Powell empty. High speed rail in California will not rectify that, but exacerbate a fast growing problem.
California politics manifests itself in many ways, and not often in a way that makes either sense or promotes the goodwill of neighboring states. Yesterday, the Oregon Senate held hearings on Klamath River dam removal and having the ratepayers of Pacific Power and Light pay the bill through their monthly power bill. So one tributary, less than half the flow of the Klamath River, gets regulated to "save salmon." Meanwhile, entirely off the table, the major tributary to the Klamath, the Trinity River, has a dam on it that captures 63% of the annual flow of the that tributary, cold snow melt, impounds it in a 2.4 million acre feet reservoir, and then lets it go through power houses and penstocks on its way down canals and through tunnels to flow into the Sacramento River, and on to its destination as irrigation water in the southern Central Valley. A lot of cheap, green hydropower created. Not a drop of that water goes down the Klamath watershed. No salmon or salmon habitat is saved. Only the 37% Interior Sec. Babbitt secured by enforcing the original dam licensing rules goes down the Trinity, and the majority of that in April and May in a faux freshet for fish benefit. I have news: streams are not fish habitat---the water in them is. Every cubic foot that leaves the watershed to irrigate and fill swimming pools is lost habitat, and salmon that never will be there. So Oregon, with 5 members of the House, is losing power and irrigation water, and California, where the preponderance of the watershed of the Klamath is located, pays no penalty, and life goes on. That is what having the Speaker, and over 55 members can do for you or to you. So if anyone thinks that California is lessening their use of critical habitat water, and is halting the sprawl, that the ESA can protect salmon, you are sadly mistaken. And they will steal the water anywhere they can, just like Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid accomplished in Nevada with his scheme that ended up with Clark county, home of Las Vegas, owning all the unused or undiscovered water under Nevada, except for the Owyhee and upper Snake River drainages. Powerful, urban, high power water theft is the future of the West. And high speed transportation efforts will only exacerbate that ongoing theft from watersheds if only because it makes sprawl more efficient in sending residents to far away work places. What will those half million new jobs demand for water, and what will the employees and families need in the way of new water?
The transportation goal is honorable. The results will not be. The West is more than California and Clark county. Keeping sprawl to a minimum, ranches intact for habitat, subdivision within reasonable limits, and our water in our states is the only way to preserve the customs and cultures here now. If it takes a while to get here or there, yeah, so what? If our votes are needed to allow for California to expand and to increase their need for water, too bad, you don't get it. There is no need for national help to solve their very local problems, created by their legislature and their voters. Build skate board lanes along the freeways. Float down the canals of Colorado River water on its way to Los Angeles. Live with it, dude. Don't put your legislative masks on, pull up you Senatorial hoodies, and rob your neighbors to make your beneficiaries' lives better. We might shoot back.