Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Take a break from playing the game and chat here about real-world transportation issues!

Moderator: General Forums Moderators

Post Reply
lugo
Engineer
Engineer
Posts: 100
Joined: 12 Oct 2010 13:55

Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by lugo »

Digging tunnels must be hell of a lot of fun. :)

Just sayin'
User avatar
orudge
Administrator
Administrator
Posts: 25216
Joined: 26 Jan 2001 20:18
Skype: orudge
Location: Banchory, UK
Contact:

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by orudge »

I suppose the link to Yakutsk makes some sense, considering the minerals, etc, up there. It is still an awfully long way between Russia/China and the US/Canada, through Siberia and Alaska - although I guess it'd be quicker than crossing the Pacific by ship, in theory.
User avatar
Level Crossing
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 1187
Joined: 07 Feb 2011 22:04
Location: East Coast, United States

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Level Crossing »

I like that the article calls funding a 'small detail'. :roll:
Like my avatar? See my screenshot thread
User avatar
teccuk
Chief Executive
Chief Executive
Posts: 674
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 21:01

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by teccuk »

60 Billion.

Oh WOW.

That's a pretty staggering sum.

If anything seems an overestimate?
User avatar
doktorhonig
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 1104
Joined: 22 Aug 2006 11:03
Location: Austria
Contact:

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by doktorhonig »

That's definitely not an overestimate.
It's maybe a bit more than with a normal tunnel, but:
1) the costs probably do not scale linearly with tunnel length
2) it's complicated to build below sea level - even in "normal tunnels" there's quite a lot of water you need to get rid of during construction
3) if they really want to move 3% of the world's (rail?) freight through that tunnel, they may have plans for four tracks, or double height for stacked container cars.
as
Transport Coordinator
Transport Coordinator
Posts: 281
Joined: 07 Mar 2007 20:13

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by as »

Building the tunnel would be just a part of the project, Yakutsk is far away from Bering Strait and there are no railroads nearby in Alaska either. Also Alaskan railroads are connected to the rest of North American network.
User avatar
PikkaBird
Graphics Moderator
Graphics Moderator
Posts: 5631
Joined: 13 Sep 2004 13:21
Location: The Moon

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by PikkaBird »

Oh that wacky Tsar Nicholas 11.
User avatar
Ameecher
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 11919
Joined: 12 Aug 2006 15:39
Contact:

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Ameecher »

Remind me what did his dad do again?
Image
User avatar
YukonRob
Transport Coordinator
Transport Coordinator
Posts: 290
Joined: 31 Jul 2007 00:58
Location: North of 63

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by YukonRob »

as wrote:Also Alaskan railroads are connected to the rest of North American network.
Alaskan railroads are most definitely NOT connected to the rest of North America. They would have to pass through the Yukon and we have no railroads [save the WP&YR - a tourist narrow gauge that only extends from Skagway to Carcross].
User avatar
teccuk
Chief Executive
Chief Executive
Posts: 674
Joined: 04 Jan 2006 21:01

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by teccuk »

doktorhonig wrote:That's definitely not an overestimate.
It's maybe a bit more than with a normal tunnel, but:
1) the costs probably do not scale linearly with tunnel length
2) it's complicated to build below sea level - even in "normal tunnels" there's quite a lot of water you need to get rid of during construction
3) if they really want to move 3% of the world's (rail?) freight through that tunnel, they may have plans for four tracks, or double height for stacked container cars.
Hmm, maybe your right. I suppose that's 40billion £ too.

Cant see this happening!
User avatar
PikkaBird
Graphics Moderator
Graphics Moderator
Posts: 5631
Joined: 13 Sep 2004 13:21
Location: The Moon

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by PikkaBird »

YukonRob wrote:
as wrote:Also Alaskan railroads are connected to the rest of North American network.
Alaskan railroads are most definitely NOT connected to the rest of North America. They would have to pass through the Yukon and we have no railroads [save the WP&YR - a tourist narrow gauge that only extends from Skagway to Carcross].
I think he accidentally a word.
User avatar
Jacko
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 2386
Joined: 13 May 2011 17:11
Location: In an alternate Universe

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Jacko »

I think even if there were railways on both sides, surely they would be using different rail gagues??

Its a good idea in theory but in practice i just dont know, its on a much bigger scale than the channel tunnel.
"O2 is for noobs, real people breath O3" ~ said sometime by Me

All comments from me may or may not be true and do not take them word-for-word

Feel Free to join me and some other people in The Nations Game - its actually quite fun.

1000th Post at Wed Feb 08, 2012 8:43 am
2000th post at Sun Apr 14, 2013 10:22 am
User avatar
Chris
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 1985
Joined: 05 Oct 2009 16:36
Location: Leeds, UK

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Chris »

Jacko wrote:Its a good idea in theory but in practice i just dont know, its on a much bigger scale than the channel tunnel.
The actual tunnel would only be about twice as long..
Screenshots

Formerly Class 165
User avatar
Kevo00
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 5646
Joined: 07 Feb 2004 01:51
Location: East Coast MainLine

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Kevo00 »

Well, the channel tunnel ended up costing about £20 billion at 1990s prices. It's on a busy trade route and will still take more than 50 years to repay that plus the cost of the capital. On that basis I think you'd be lucky to do this for £100bn today and then there is still the cost of capital which isnt going to be cheap for a project like this, especially based on the channel tunnel experience. And the cost of carriage would have to be very low compared to the already very low cost of container shipping to attract cargo, meaning it might end up taking centuries to pay back.

Compare this to the low infra costs of container shipping - and this project does not look economically viable in the slightest..
User avatar
Jacko
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 2386
Joined: 13 May 2011 17:11
Location: In an alternate Universe

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Jacko »

Plus with the seriously unfavourable weather conditions, its going to be a lot harder than in a stable, temperate climate that is Northern France and Southern UK.
"O2 is for noobs, real people breath O3" ~ said sometime by Me

All comments from me may or may not be true and do not take them word-for-word

Feel Free to join me and some other people in The Nations Game - its actually quite fun.

1000th Post at Wed Feb 08, 2012 8:43 am
2000th post at Sun Apr 14, 2013 10:22 am
User avatar
doktorhonig
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 1104
Joined: 22 Aug 2006 11:03
Location: Austria
Contact:

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by doktorhonig »

Russian workers are probably cheaper. The question is, whether they need some international engineers as well.

I think this can fill the gap between air and sea transport. If you order a parcel from China, you often don't need it to arrive within a week, but maybe you don't want it to take over a month. And the larger your stuff is, the more expensive air transport and the more competitive rail transport will be.
User avatar
John
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 3402
Joined: 05 May 2003 18:44
Location: Cotswolds, UK
Contact:

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by John »

doktorhonig wrote:Russian workers are probably cheaper. The question is, whether they need some international engineers as well.
Most definitely. But Engineers are the designers, so you only need a handful - which would represent an absolutely tiny proportion of the total budget. You would dig the tunnel from both ends - the western end would be staffed by asian/russian workers, and the eastern end by American (incl. Canada, USA, Mexico and the rest of South America).

Jacko wrote:Plus with the seriously unfavourable weather conditions, its going to be a lot harder than in a stable, temperate climate that is Northern France and Southern UK.
For building, yes - but then shipping is also susceptible to bad weather. Although it has the huge advantage that if a ship sinks, everyone else can just steer round it - not so for trains.

But I can't see this getting built - there just isn't a huge need for something that's slower than a plane, and faster than a ship. Ask again once the oil has run out.


I'd also like to see how they plan on protecting a tunnel dug through an active fault line.
User avatar
Jacko
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 2386
Joined: 13 May 2011 17:11
Location: In an alternate Universe

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Jacko »

That is very true.

The messages would be interesting wouldnt they?

'this train has been cancelled due to it being flattened and Totally and utterly destroyed by a lava flow........'
"O2 is for noobs, real people breath O3" ~ said sometime by Me

All comments from me may or may not be true and do not take them word-for-word

Feel Free to join me and some other people in The Nations Game - its actually quite fun.

1000th Post at Wed Feb 08, 2012 8:43 am
2000th post at Sun Apr 14, 2013 10:22 am
User avatar
doktorhonig
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 1104
Joined: 22 Aug 2006 11:03
Location: Austria
Contact:

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by doktorhonig »

John wrote:But I can't see this getting built - there just isn't a huge need for something that's slower than a plane, and faster than a ship. Ask again once the oil has run out.
Oil won't run out. It will just become so expensive that we don't use it for transportation anymore. At some point of time it will be so expensive that we rather synthesize it instead of investing billions to queeze the last drop of it from somewhere below the ocean.

But since it will take 20 years or more to build this, oil will already be 2x to 5x more expensive as now, so better start digging and get some renewable energy to run trains there.
User avatar
Kevo00
Tycoon
Tycoon
Posts: 5646
Joined: 07 Feb 2004 01:51
Location: East Coast MainLine

Re: Sibiria - Alaska for only $65 billion

Post by Kevo00 »

Well, we haven't reached peak oil yet, so I think that scenario is actually a lot further away than people like to think. In any case, extraction technology is improving all the time.

In any case, even if we have to go back to steam or fit ships with nuclear reactors the case for building this tunnel still looks extremely limited. A Shanghai-LA rail journey might well take longer than the boat, which taks about 20 days and can carry more than a train could. Plus don't forget all the maintenance costs for the thousands of miles of connecting line from Vladivostok to Vancouver, which would need to be entirely supported by the tunnel traffic.
Post Reply

Return to “Real-World Transport Discussion”

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 12 guests