High speed rail: benefits that add up

This report argues that Australian could gain $48 billion of benefits from adopting high speed rail. High speed rail (“HSR”) now exists on every continent except for Australia and Antarctica. There is a great deal of international experience and analysis available to assess the likely costs and bene...

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Main Author: Naomi Edwards
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: Australian Greens 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://apo.org.au/node/32082
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spelling ftapo:oai:apo.org.au:32082 2023-05-15T13:54:35+02:00 High speed rail: benefits that add up Naomi Edwards Australia 2012-11-28 00:00:00 http://apo.org.au/node/32082 unknown Australian Greens http://apo.org.au/node/32082 Sustainability Rural conditions Transportation Report 2012 ftapo 2020-05-20T09:43:47Z This report argues that Australian could gain $48 billion of benefits from adopting high speed rail. High speed rail (“HSR”) now exists on every continent except for Australia and Antarctica. There is a great deal of international experience and analysis available to assess the likely costs and benefits of HSR. As with all nation-building infrastructure projects, the costs of HSR are more straightforward to assess than the benefits. This is because the costs tend to be monetised and straightforward, whereas the benefits are mostly externalised and spread across the broader economy. Costs are incurred up front, whereas the benefits accrue over decades. This is certainly the case with HSR. This report has identified some $48 billion of benefits from HSR, including direct user benefits and also externalities to society. The Phase 1 Report into high speed rail (HSR), published by the Australian Government in 2011, quantified the likely costs to build a HSR on Australia’s east coast, at about $80 billion. The benefits of HSR will be quantified in the Phase 2 Report, due to be completed this year. The benefits, once quantified, are significant. They include both direct benefits to HSR users and operators (i.e. through time savings and profits, respectively) and indirect benefits to society (called externalities). The main externalities include fewer accidents, lower greenhouse gas emissions, less air and noise pollution, less congestion on roads and at airports and substantial time savings to users. There are significant benefits to regional Australia in towns where the HSR passes through, agglomeration benefits and benefits to cities with a HSR station. Agglomeration and regional rebalancing benefits are not quantified in this report, although they have been in some other recent reports. This report places indicative values on the externality and user benefits. Report Antarc* Antarctica Australian Policy Online (Institute for Social Research, Swinburne University of Technology)
institution Open Polar
collection Australian Policy Online (Institute for Social Research, Swinburne University of Technology)
op_collection_id ftapo
language unknown
topic Sustainability
Rural conditions
Transportation
spellingShingle Sustainability
Rural conditions
Transportation
Naomi Edwards
High speed rail: benefits that add up
topic_facet Sustainability
Rural conditions
Transportation
description This report argues that Australian could gain $48 billion of benefits from adopting high speed rail. High speed rail (“HSR”) now exists on every continent except for Australia and Antarctica. There is a great deal of international experience and analysis available to assess the likely costs and benefits of HSR. As with all nation-building infrastructure projects, the costs of HSR are more straightforward to assess than the benefits. This is because the costs tend to be monetised and straightforward, whereas the benefits are mostly externalised and spread across the broader economy. Costs are incurred up front, whereas the benefits accrue over decades. This is certainly the case with HSR. This report has identified some $48 billion of benefits from HSR, including direct user benefits and also externalities to society. The Phase 1 Report into high speed rail (HSR), published by the Australian Government in 2011, quantified the likely costs to build a HSR on Australia’s east coast, at about $80 billion. The benefits of HSR will be quantified in the Phase 2 Report, due to be completed this year. The benefits, once quantified, are significant. They include both direct benefits to HSR users and operators (i.e. through time savings and profits, respectively) and indirect benefits to society (called externalities). The main externalities include fewer accidents, lower greenhouse gas emissions, less air and noise pollution, less congestion on roads and at airports and substantial time savings to users. There are significant benefits to regional Australia in towns where the HSR passes through, agglomeration benefits and benefits to cities with a HSR station. Agglomeration and regional rebalancing benefits are not quantified in this report, although they have been in some other recent reports. This report places indicative values on the externality and user benefits.
format Report
author Naomi Edwards
author_facet Naomi Edwards
author_sort Naomi Edwards
title High speed rail: benefits that add up
title_short High speed rail: benefits that add up
title_full High speed rail: benefits that add up
title_fullStr High speed rail: benefits that add up
title_full_unstemmed High speed rail: benefits that add up
title_sort high speed rail: benefits that add up
publisher Australian Greens
publishDate 2012
url http://apo.org.au/node/32082
op_coverage Australia
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation http://apo.org.au/node/32082
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