aussie-boy
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- HSC
- 2008
Congestion costs Sydney $8bn p.a. and rising.What economic benefits? Explain how shifting businesses to regional areas provides a net benefit.
If anything it is less efficient environmentally to have large amounts of people living sparsely populated regional areas as they will have to travel more. Even with a HSR rail corridor, many more trips will still have to be made by cars and planes to places not on the corridor than if population was more centralized in the capital cities.
Current population growth has to be accomodated in greenfield sites on city fringes, where people are being forced to undertake long commute times.
Building new public transport underneath Sydney is incredibly expensive, certainly much more than it would cost to build in new regional centres.
There is an ideal geographic size for a city, which Sydney has surpassed, and densification of the existing urban areas is limited because property prices make redevelopments extremely costly and often unviable.
Dense regional centres are a far superior method of development.
This benefit alone is worth $bns of positive externalities in the long run
A new airport would cost $6-8bn, and would be located outside of the Sydney basin (i.e. would require a fast train link anyway)The savings are negligible in comparison to the cost of HSR corridor.
A HSR line will cost $18-36bn. A 1/3 'discount' is not "negligible" at all.
Whatever, you refuse to grasp the issue.It is not the 4th busiest "transport corridor" in the world, not even close. It is the 4th busiest passenger air traffic route. This is because over this distance air travel is very cheap and efficient so most trips are done by air.
9 million pax p.a. is a huge number, and forecast to rise 70% by 2020
The trains would be full, let there be no doubt about that.
Yes, Government concessions as in specific tax breaks. No direct subsidies were requested.Orly? Where is the evidence of that. I'm very skeptical that huge government concessions of some sort weren't being required.
No-ones saying air travel doesn't work well... it clearly does.What do you mean by efficiency? Air travel is cheap, safe and convenient. The only concern is environmental issues and as has already been addressed in the thread, there are much more cost effective ways or reducing carbon emissions.
The key concerns here are managing air traffic growth (I don't buy the oil point at all, airlines will find alternative fuels without a doubt) and good urban planning (the need to get out of a capital city centric mentality)