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Canberra Today 14°/16° | Friday, March 29, 2024 | Digital Edition | Crossword & Sudoku

Liberal-funded report slams light rail

Bordeaux light rail

THE Liberals’ Alistair Coe has released the summary of a report he commissioned to look into the viability of light rail in Canberra.

“What the opposition has done is use some of our own resources to get an independent evaluation onto the merits of what the government has proposed,” Alistair said.

“It is right and proper for the opposition to use resources to try and find out exactly what the government is proposing and whether or not it stacks up for taxpayers.

“At the end of the day 600 to 900 million dollars is a lot of money to spend on a project that hasn’t been properly assessed.

“The opposition has engaged the services of Mr Bob Nairn to undertake an assessment of the proposed 12.5km route from Gungahlin to the City.

“Bob Nairn has done a considerable amount of work in the transport space, here in the ACT, across Australia and in 40 countries around the world.”

Based on American costings the summary concludes that the project will cost $940 million and cost tens of millions annually for over thirty years.

In response ACT Light Rail has questioned the use of American costings

“Mr Bob Nairn, a retired transport consultant, was commissioned by the Canberra Liberals to perform this research. Without access to the report, ACT Light Rail can only comment on what the media has selected to use in its reporting,” the rail advocates said.

“The first thing that strikes us as odd, is that the costings are based on US figures. There is ample contemporary light rail construction and vehicle procurement locally, that Australian figures and costs from Gold Coast, Adelaide or Perth could easily have been obtained. So why have the Canberra Liberals and Mr Nairn used US figures? This is puzzling, especially as Mr Nairn has experience consulting to Australian light rail projects.”


UPDATE: “CityNews” has now obtained the full report and made it available.


FURTHER UPDATE: Simon Corbell has come out swinging in defence of his train set.

“The paper on light rail commissioned by the Canberra Liberals chooses the most expensive construction method for the project and its use discredits the entire report,” Simon said.

“The report is inaccurate, based on incorrect assumptions and does not stack up to rigorous assessment. It does not include important economic benefits from the project and uses unsound cost and construction assumptions. The paper’s author acknowledged the report assumes a construction alignment which is more expensive than constructing in the median corridor, and makes cost assumptions based only on a very few hand-selected foreign examples.

“Cost benefit analyses for transport projects are complex. The Liberals’ paper is based upon simplistic assumptions, including very limited foreign benchmarking that is not specific to Canberra and it cannot be relied upon.

“In contrast, Capital Metro’s analysis is robust and will stand up to industry standards for a project of this complexity. Our experienced economic advisers draw upon detailed and well considered inputs prepared by specialists with extensive experience on previous similar projects.

“The Liberals’ paper is based on the most expensive alignment option, a two-tracks system, one on either side of Northbourne Avenue, where the footpaths currently are. The government’s assumptions are based on the use of the median corridor because it is a more cost effective option and one which produces a better transportation outcome.

“The figures cited in the paper on benefit cost ratio and capital expenditure are completely out of the ball park. The BCR in the Liberals’ paper is less than 1.0. In contrast, work undertaken by Capital Metro and its economic advisors confirms the BCR for Capital Metro is positive and therefore delivers a positive economic return to the ACT.”

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Ian Meikle, editor

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