The study explores the escalating costs of transit construction in Canada, particularly in comparison with global benchmarks. The focus is on understanding cost drivers and identifying reforms that could bring costs in line with international standards.
Key Findings:
1. Escalating Costs in Canada:
- The cost of building transit projects in Canada, particularly in cities like Toronto, has risen dramatically, far exceeding inflation.
- For instance, Toronto’s transit costs have reached up to $1 billion/km for certain subway projects, significantly higher than international counterparts like Spain and Turkey.
2. Comparison with Global Peers:
- Canada ranks as one of the highest-cost jurisdictions globally, averaging $396 million/km, while the global average is $242 million/km.
- Countries like Spain ($95M/km) and Chile ($89M/km) deliver projects far more cost-effectively.
3. Primary Cost Drivers:
- Overbuilding and Overdesign: Canadian projects often build larger tunnels and stations with unnecessary design redundancies, driven by risk aversion and stringent safety interpretations.
- Knowledge Retention Issues: A lack of institutional expertise and reliance on external consultants lead to inefficiencies.
- Risk Allocation: Risk transfer in public-private partnerships (P3s) results in higher costs, as contractors charge premiums for assumed risks.
- External Constraints: Political micromanagement, third-party agreements, and high construction market saturation inflate costs.
4. The Anglosphere Cost Premium:
- English-speaking countries (e.g., Canada, the U.S., Australia) consistently experience higher costs due to insular project delivery practices and governance issues.
5. Global Best Practices:
Jurisdictions like Spain, Turkey, and South Korea deliver complex projects at lower costs by:
- Limiting contingency budgets (7-12%).
- Emphasizing transparency in project delivery and cost benchmarks.
- Utilizing simpler procurement models and retaining in-house expertise.
6. Recommendations:
- Reforms in procurement processes, risk management practices, and institutional governance.
- Adopting global best practices, reducing overdesign, and improving cost estimation transparency.
Conclusion
The high transit construction costs in Canada are not inevitable but stem from systemic inefficiencies in project delivery, governance, and risk allocation. By learning from global examples and implementing targeted reforms, Canada can reduce costs and deliver infrastructure more effectively.