Thanks a lot.
High Speed Rail Canada is a non-profit organization. I just want to let you know right off the top that we are non-partisan. We don't accept any money from the Railway Association of Canada, Bombardier, Siemens, and Alstom. That gives us a lot of credibility when we go out and do public symposiums, and we have our website to educate Canadians. We have just one method, one scope: it is to educate Canadians on the benefits of high-speed rail in Canada. Again, as I mentioned, we do it through our website and through our public symposiums.
As Cliff mentioned, this is an exciting time in high-speed rail. I can't say enough. I get phone calls to have these public symposiums in different cities, and I have to tell them that I have children, I have soccer schedules, and we can't do it this summer. Windsor, Ottawa, Montreal, Calgary, and Vancouver want us to come to their community to give a symposium on high-speed rail. The website regularly gets 200 hits a day. The studies are accessed on the site. So it is an exciting time.
When I talk about the benefits of high-speed rail, or higher-speed rail, I think it's good to do a quick definition. What I mean by high speed is anything over 200 kilometres an hour. Some people argue that's low, and that's true. In Europe the normal speed for a lot of the lines is 325 kilometres an hour, far above the 150 that VIA Rail does. Higher-speed rail is also part of the picture.
I want to go to President Obama for a second. As we all know, he made a visionary statement two weeks ago when he went on American television and said we have to modernize our passenger rail system. When I talk about higher-speed rail, two of the corridors he mentioned are ones that I'm going to mention here for examples of higher-speed rail. He mentioned Vancouver to Seattle. Vancouver to Seattle is a good example. Amtrak runs that now. It's never going to be a 300-kilometre-an-hour area, but it is an area where they can do track improvements, where they can do improvements with freight, and they can get the speeds up to maybe 150 kilometres an hour.
So there are two things we're talking about here: high-speed rail, but we're also talking about higher speeds. And we're not just talking about Calgary and Edmonton, corridor number one for high speed; and the number two corridor, of course, is Windsor to Quebec City. I give the example of Vancouver to Seattle. The President also talked about Montreal to Boston. Again, that would be something over a longer period of time. The studies have been done that they would go up to a higher speed. Right now, they don't even connect; the track has been taken out.
So why high-speed rail in Canada? I'm going to go into the typical reasons, but I want to give you the example of what happened to me today when trying to get here from Kitchener, Ontario. I live about an hour and a half west of Toronto and last Friday I tried to book the flight. I called Bearskin Airlines, which fly from Kitchener to Ottawa. They wanted $750. I told that to the cab driver coming in from the airport today. He said he went to Cuba for a week, all expenses paid, for $750. Something is wrong. So then I thought, okay, I'm going to call VIA. VIA was going to take seven hours to get here from Kitchener. It would take me 14 hours back and forth to give what might be a one-hour presentation. We need to modernize.
One more example. I got Air Canada coming here, but going back to Toronto from Ottawa tonight, I couldn't get Air Canada. Their flights were $525. This is simply not acceptable in a modern G-8 country like we have. So when I say that Canada is the only G-8 country without a high-speed rail system, we're so far behind what is an accepted norm of a viable alternative to taking your car or flying, it's hard to explain how bad it is.
I just gave you three examples, and that's for one flight I booked, for one time I tried to come here.
Let's move on to the benefits. And feel free at the end of this to ask me questions, because I'm not coming at it from anywhere. I'll tell you the good, the bad, and the ugly. It's a movie I like, actually, but that's another question.
Reduced travel time.... A good example is the Calgary-Edmonton corridor. We're talking about going down from three hours to an hour and a half. In the Quebec corridor we're talking about going down from four hours to three hours, or four to two hours, depending on the times. This in itself gives you more time to do other things. This improves your quality of life.
Cliff talked about greenhouse gas emission reduction. The studies have been done. I have two here: one from Calgary in 2004, and another from the Ontario and federal governments in 1995. By 2025 carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide emissions are going to be reduced by up to 24% along the corridor, Ontario to Quebec. There are 17 studies. This is not news. In the Calgary study, we see a reduction of 1.8 million metric tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions. This is from 2004, three years ago. The Alberta government actually has another study from 2007.
With respect to reduced dependency on petroleum, I can give you an example from California. You're going to say that California isn't Canada. There are some similarities—they're new at it, and the Ontario-Quebec corridor and the California corridor cover about the same distance. When they implement the California high-speed line, they're going to save 12.7 billion barrels of oil per year. That's significant, getting off our oil addiction. We all know about that. It's a well-known fact that twin-track railway has a typical capacity 13% greater than a six-lane highway. That's not new. It's been around for decades. And it takes 40% less land. Isn't that good?
We know we have an economic crisis in Canada. Employment is important, no doubt about it. We need to get people back to work. The two high-speed corridors, according to the 2004 Calgary study, would create 25,000 to 52,000 person-years of construction employment and $1 billion to $2 billion in associated employment income. There will be 2,000 to 4,000 direct and indirect jobs produced. Jobs—that's getting people to work! The study is only three years old; it's a current study. The 1995 study says that in Ontario-Quebec, over 25 years, more than 1,700 jobs per year will be created. That's just part of the reason you go high-speed rail. I'm not saying it's going to solve all your economic problems. It's part of a positive puzzle that, once you put it together, gives us an alternative to the road or the air.
My favourite point is public safety. I work in occupational health and safety. I stopped watching the TV news three years ago because it was so depressing. It would often start with the latest car crash in my area. The Ontario-Quebec federal study said 40% of the riders on the high-speed rail line would be former auto users. Wouldn't it be amazing if there was a 40% reduction of traffic on the 401?
Then there's the technology. This is the gold standard in France—the TGV Alstom. They have over 650 high-speed trains a day going. They carry over 900 million passengers a year. Since 1981, they've had zero fatalities. That's what we want to see. You have to put public safety first. It's nothing new. What are we talking about—24, 28 years old now? The proof's there.
For all those reasons, I think we need to move forward on high-speed rail.
I thank you for having me come in today.