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CDPQ, Systra Win Bid to Build Canada High-Speed Rail Project

(Bloomberg) -- Canada awarded a contract for a 1,000-kilometer (621-mile) high-speed passenger rail project between Toronto and Quebec City to a group led by the Caisse de Depot et Placement du Quebec.

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau made the announcement Wednesday in Montreal. Overall costs were not disclosed, but high-level studies done by the transportation department said a high-speed rail project in the region would reach well over C$65 billion ($45.7 billion) — and it’s likely to be much higher.

The government chose a consortium named Cadence to develop, build and operate the project known as Alto. It includes CDPQ’s infrastructure unit along with engineering firms AtkinsRealis Group Inc. and Systra SA and transportation companies Groupe Keolis SAS, Air Canada and SNCF Voyageurs.

Canada has allocated C$3.9 billion over the next several years to develop the project, but there’s no timeline for completion.

Proponents have been talking about high-speed rail for decades as a tool for economic development and reducing emissions. Canada is the world’s second-largest country in land area, but 60% of its 41 million people live in Ontario and Quebec and most of those are in a southern corridor — density that creates suitable conditions for rail.

But Trudeau is set to leave office next month and an election is near. A new government will be under pressure to make investments in military, security and energy infrastructure; it’s too early to say where a high-speed rail project would fit in with its priorities.

Trudeau and Transport Minister Anita Anand emphasized at a news conference that it would be hard for a future government to walk away from the contracts, or to pass up the productivity gains to the Canadian economy.

“Future governments will make their determinations about how they invest. But this investment in Canadians, which starts right now, is going to be very difficult to turn back on,” Trudeau said.

Philip Lawrence, a Conservative member of parliament, said that if his party is elected, it will make Canada’s rail network “more reliable, efficient and cost effective.” But he did not pledge to support a high-speed train. “Today’s announcement is yet another promise with no details that will take years and C$3.9 billion on planning and bureaucracy, without laying a single piece of track,” Lawrence said in an email.