Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Cities want green buses over subways: CIB head

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jul, 2021 09:56 AM
  • Cities want green buses over subways: CIB head

The head of a federal infrastructure financing agency says he has seen a shift in the types of transit projects cities want to build as they opt for zero-emission buses in lieu of large-scale subways.

Canada Infrastructure Bank chief executive Ehren Cory says the shift mirrors other changes in the planning of projects the agency was set up to help fund like electricity grid projects.

What it means for the financing agency is a rethink of how much of the billions in public funding will go to smaller projects rather than large ones.

The bank has set aside $5 billion in spending in the short-term on transit projects, with about $1.5 billion of that going towards helping transit operators replace aging diesel buses with zero-emission fleets.

Along with the most recent announcement of financing to Brampton, Ont., a loan of up to $400 million for the purchase of 450 zero-emission buses by 2027, the agency has committed roughly $1 billion in financing towards zero-emission buses.

Cory says the agency won't hesitate to adjust its investment plans if demand for zero-emission buses outstrips the current financing targets.

"Just to be clear, though, we're quite flexible. And if that ends up being $2 billion for (zero-emission bus fleets) and $3 billion for other things like light rail, that will still be just fine," he said in an interview.

"Our goal is to deploy our capital in the transit space. The outcomes we care about are transit ridership and GHG reduction, and it's up to the owners of those the fleet owners, municipalities, to make the trade-offs."

The Liberals created the agency in 2017 to entice funding from private-sector partners, particularly big institutional investors like pension funds, to stretch available federal dollars and pay for what the government called "transformational" infrastructure projects.

The original vision of large-scale construction projects, though, have given way to what Cory described as more scaled, nimble and flexible projects. In the transit space, it has meant more cities talking about zero-emission buses or smaller light rail to connect to the spine of a subway.

It's not just transit fleets getting money: The agency has signed a financing deal for a fleet of zero-emission school buses in British Columbia. Cory says the agency is deep in negotiations on a similar arrangement that he hinted could be announced in the coming weeks.

So why the interest in these fleets?

The buses themselves don't come with new revenues generated through user fees, which had been part of the original vision of the infrastructure bank: The projects were supposed to be revenue-generating to help the private backer get a return, or profit, on their investment.

But, Cory says, they do come with reduced maintenance and fuel costs over time. Those savings can help the city finance other projects, and repay the agency's investment.

"I think that's why we're getting the uptake we did," Cory says.

"There's a pretty consistent theme that municipalities see this as additive to their efforts and as a place where the CIB can be really helpful to them."

MORE National ARTICLES

Baby killed, father hurt in Vancouver crash

Baby killed, father hurt in Vancouver crash
An 11-month-old has been killed and the infant's father injured after they were hit by one of two vehicles that collided in downtown Vancouver. Police say the pedestrians were hit as an SUV and a sports car collided Tuesday night.

Baby killed, father hurt in Vancouver crash

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares
West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. says it plans to buy back up to $1 billion worth of its shares. The forestry company says it is conducting a "modified Dutch auction" with a tender price range of $85 to $98 per share.

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced
Gabriel Klein will serve a life sentence for the second-degree murder of Letisha Reimer and the aggravated assault of her friend in November 2016.

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced

CP resumes rail service through Lytton, B.C., area

CP resumes rail service through Lytton, B.C., area
Canadian Pacific Railway says in a statement that mainline operations resumed Monday after safety inspections were completed of the tracks and infrastructure.

CP resumes rail service through Lytton, B.C., area

B.C. first province to introduce hydrogen strategy

B.C. first province to introduce hydrogen strategy
British Columbia is Canada's first province to introduce a business and environmental strategy on how renewable and low-carbon hydrogen can reduce emissions and create jobs in the clean technology sector.

B.C. first province to introduce hydrogen strategy

46 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

46 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
 78.1% (3,618,865) of eligible people 12 and older in B.C. have received their first dose of COVID-19 vaccine, and 37% (1,714,394) received their second dose.

46 COVID19 cases for Tuesday