(Then we can get to work scaling this Disneyworld Express model: next up, Providence to Natick Mall!)
I used to be pretty hopped-up about high-speed rail in the US, but I read a series of fantastic articles by the Harvard economist Edward Glaeser in the New York Times' Economix blog last year that people here may find interesting:
Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
Glaeser runs the numbers using some pretty fair (or even generous) assumptions, and it looks as if, outside of the Boston-DC route, the economics are pretty unlikely to work in the US.
Of course, money may be justifiably spent by the state if it does achieve some other, societal goals. Glaeser also looks at a number of supposed non-monetary benefits that supporters bring up -- the environmental angle or the geographical/urbanization angle of eliminating sprawl -- and knocks them down pretty well.
I have yet to see such rigorous, analytical thinking from the other side outside of claims about how the carbon footprint per person is much lower on a train than a car (as is fairly obvious), and while I have loved the experience of traveling on high-speed rail in Germany, France, Italy and Spain, Europe is a much more densely populated continent where the economics make much more sense. I do worry that high-speed rail here is unlikely to ever come close to breaking even or being (outside the Acela route) a viable option for the necessary critical mass of people in the rest of the country -- Ablarc already addressed this issue well in writing about the proposed Tampa-Orlando line. (Unfortunately, since Acela is run like a profit cow to make up for deficits incurred by Amtrak everywhere else, where trains are run as a government service rather than as a business, it's prohibitively expensive for most of us to ever use it.)
To that end, it seems that high-speed rail is being pushed by Obama with the goals Glaeser annihilates in mind (environment and sprawl) as well as as part of a "pissing contest" with China and using somewhat-dubious arguments about "creating jobs in the US" (even though trains, which are more likely to be made by non-American companies and in overseas factories, will be displacing automobiles and planes that are more likely to be made in the US) or capitalizing on technologies that arise as byproducts of HSR (though these haven't exactly happened in Europe or elsewhere, and if they were to happen there, US companies would still be able to leverage them). Is it not possible that while there are strong economic arguments for, e.g., improving freight-rail connections and expanding use of rail for freight transportation (it's currently 38% here, versus 8% in Europe), passenger HSR just doesn't make sense for the US?
Given that, you can't help but worry whether the hundreds of billions in government spending that would be necessary to really build high-speed rail in the US wouldn't be better put toward, e.g., cancer research at the National Institutes of Health. Similarly, it's tough to feel that the charge isn't being led by companies closely connected to the Obama admin and government in general (GE as well as European companies with big lobbying arms in the US like Siemens), and other lobbying groups.
I don't mean to be a spoilsport, but I can't help but think of the "monorail" Simpsons episode: HSR is sexy and hard to dislike. But if you move beyond the less-serious arguments of "green jobs are great!" and "China has HSR!" and run the numbers for the US, it seems like we may be headed toward a massively expensive flop.
If there's no economic, environmental, urban-planning or industrial case to be made for HSR, then why would you invest hundreds of billions or even trillions of dollars in it? I can't help but feel that it's a mere fetish at that point.
There and elsewhere off the Eastern Seaboard, nobody rides the existing rails; why would a ridership that the population density doesn't seem to suggest even exists stump up for a much more expensive train ticket?
why spend hundreds of billions on something nobody (outside the governors who get the photo-ops) has proven they want?
Curing cancer, for instance, is both sexy and yields very clear benefits to every American (and non-American); until it can be shown that HSR really is what the Kool-Aid says it is, I'd rather put the hundreds of billions toward that.
Florida Governor Rejects Tampa-Orlando High-Speed Rail Line
By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS
Published: February 16, 2011
Gov. Rick Scott of Florida on Wednesday rejected plans for a high-speed rail line linking Tampa and Orlando, in the process turning down $2 billion in federal funds and thwarting a critical piece of President Obama?s goal of building a national high-speed rail network.
Mr. Scott is the third Republican governor elected in November to turn down a portion of the administration?s national rail network, joining John Kasich of Ohio and Scott Walker of Wisconsin. Each of the three governors replaced a Democrat who had lobbied for the funds.
The Obama administration has called for spending $53 billion on passenger trains and high-speed rail projects over the next six years as part of the president?s goal of making high-speed rail accessible to 80 percent of Americans within 25 years.
But critics ? including the Republican majority in the House of Representatives, which has questioned the White House?s rail strategy ? say the need to link Tampa and Orlando, separated by about 84 miles, pales in comparison with the need for high-speed rail serving places that have received relatively little in federal economic stimulus funds for transportation projects, like the busy Northeast corridor between Washington and Boston.
In a statement Wednesday, Mr. Scott said cost overruns related to the Tampa-to-Orlando line could leave Florida taxpayers with a $3 billion tab. He also said he believed ridership and revenue estimates for the rail line were too optimistic, and that state taxpayers would have been left to pay for subsidies to keep the line running because it would be unable to pay for itself.
Mr. Scott said that although one study had projected that three million people would use the Tampa-to-Orlando line annually, he pointed out that only 3.2 million people rode Amtrak?s Acela trains in the Northeast corridor in 2010, even though the population centers along the Acela route have as much as eight times the population of the area serviced by the proposed Florida line.
Mr. Scott also said that if Florida had started the project and then decided it was too costly to continue, the state would have had to return $2.4 billion to the federal government.
?The truth is that this project would be far too costly to taxpayers, and I believe the risk far outweighs the benefits,? he said at a news conference in Tallahassee.
Ray LaHood, the transportation secretary, said in a statement Wednesday that he was ?extremely disappointed? by Mr. Scott?s decision, but that the money would most likely be redistributed to other states.
?We worked with the governor to make sure we eliminated all financial risk for the state, instead requiring private businesses competing for the project to assume cost overruns and operating expenses,? Mr. LaHood said. ?There is overwhelming demand for high-speed rail in other states that are enthusiastic to receive Florida?s funding and the economic benefits it can deliver.?
Representative Kathy Castor, a Florida Democrat, said the governor?s decision would keep Florida from adding thousands of potential new jobs related to the project at a time when the state is in dire economic need.
?Turning down these jobs and investment dollars does nothing to reduce the nation?s deficit,? Ms. Castor said. ?Instead, the billions of investment dollars and thousands of jobs will simply go to other states ? states whose governors understand the jobs and economic benefits that are at stake.?
The decision Wednesday was not the first time a Florida governor has scuttled efforts to bring high-speed rail to the state.
In 1999, the governor at the time, Jeb Bush, canceled a 325-mile line that would have run connected Tampa, Orlando and Miami. The next year, voters approved a constitutional amendment that required the state to build the link. But in 2004, voters repealed that amendment.
The current proposal for a high-speed Tampa-to-Orlando line, which was supposed to eventually link to Miami, was one of two high-speed lines approved by Congress. The other would connect San Francisco and Los Angeles. That project has received federal pledges of about $3 billion, though the cost has been estimated to be $43 billion.
Gary Fineout contributed reporting from Tallahassee, Fla.