Mrs. Borges, when we last talked about an hour ago, I wanted to follow the process of regulatory changes that might be required, especially as they emanate from Transport Canada. I think you made some allusions to those, but I'm going to eschew that opportunity and perhaps have a more detailed discussion down the road.
I'm tempted--and I hope you'll forgive me if I lapse into temptation here--to address a couple of the issues that come forward, in part because I'd like you to finish off my soliloquy with your responses, so forgive me; it's the most efficient way of getting points across.
During the course of various types of governments in this country, Transport Canada has aided in expanding the airport transportation system. There has been a substantial amount of investment in the construction of airports for the purpose of facilitating air transport, whether for goods or for people. We've made enormous investments. In fact, we've devolved the sum of the usual authorities that were vested in Transport Canada to local airport authorities.
Second, I think you said that in terms of railways or highways, we would still have to have that infrastructure in place because of the nature of the country, so that asset has to be maintained, no matter what. I think you said that in the context of answering some observations that related to whether this was a more strategic decision or whether it was a regionally based decision. However, since that study in 1995, an additional two million people have moved into what is generally conceded to be the corridor, i.e., Windsor to Quebec City. That accounts for about 55% of the population of Canada.
Keeping in mind that we have a population that's spread out over a huge expanse--and nobody will ever have me contest that--I'm wondering whether we put out some of these facts in order to discourage a decision or to have a more informed decision, because in terms of population density, along that corridor the population density rivals the population densities in Europe and even in Japan.
I'm concerned that some of the things we are asking our consultants to determine are really outside the parameters of making a decision. When I hear some of my colleagues asking if we are taking passenger capacity away from one particular mode and putting it onto another, it becomes interesting for me, and I am wondering if you can address this.
Most of the studies that show where that passenger capacity comes from.... I thought it was you who said that 44% of the short haul is lost to airlines. I suppose that's the example in Europe, primarily. That may well be true, but that's only in the case where you have high-speed transport that rivals the efficiency of air travel.
For example, if you're looking at Toronto-Ottawa or Toronto-Montreal, you're looking at roughly an hour or an hour and fifteen minutes, and if you have high-speed transport that comes within half an hour of that, then you prompt a decision. In Europe, you eliminate rapid air service. You don't eliminate anything else, and a rapid air service will only be impacted in places like Toronto-Ottawa, Toronto-Montreal, or maybe even Quebec-Montreal. It certainly won't have any effect on all that service that's already been eliminated from Toronto to London to Windsor. That's gone. It just doesn't exist anymore. You know that. Over the course of the time that I've been here, we've been slashing away that service. The airlines have done the very best they could to consolidate service, which means you don't get any.
I'm wondering whether we've done an appropriate assessment on that, because as I said when I started off, what's been holding us back? It hasn't been that we want to copy somebody else. The Spaniards watched our example and then said, “Well, we don't want to do what the Canadians are doing”, so they spent close to $600 billion in industrial strategy based on high-speed rail. They have a population the size of ours, but a country the size of New Brunswick. Why do they want to get from point A to point B any faster than maybe the roadrunner can get there? And he doesn't need to get there.
I'm wondering whether we're putting up straw men or women in order not to make a decision. How long will it take us to put the money out? I go back to the $1.8 billion per year. Taking the federal government component of that—and I don't know how much it will be, but let's be generous and say it's 50%—the Department of Transport would be asked to go to cabinet for $900 million a year for the next 10 years in order to achieve an industrial plan.