National Post

Losses mount for Via Rail as it copes with aging fleet

- Bryan Passifiume

Two years after travel came roaring back after the COVID, Via Rail’s ridership numbers are still substantia­lly below where they were before the pandemic, and the Crown corporatio­n is bleeding money even as it faces an urgent need to replace its trains.

In its newly released annual report, Via Rail said its total revenues reached a five-year high in 2023 to $430.7 million, but operating expenses increase over the same period to $812.5 million, resulting in a $381.8 million operating loss.

Via’s on-time performanc­e, which saw a modest increase during the pandemic, sat at just 59 per cent in 2023, up two per cent from 2022 but a nine per cent drop from 2019’s performanc­e.

The railway last year began a fleet-replacemen­t program to phase out aging locomotive­s and rolling stock on their Windsor to Quebec City “corridor” trains with Siemens Venture train sets, Via’s first new locomotive­s since 2001, and the railroad’s newest railcars in decades.

Much of Via’s rolling stock is well beyond the projected lifespan, with many of the stainless steel cars used daily on long-haul journeys dating back to the 1950s or earlier.

“Simply put, our existing trains need to be replaced as they are past their prime and will be forced into retirement in the coming years,” said Via’s President and CEO Mario Péloquin.

Via Rail Board Chair Françoise Bertrand said that improving service on long-distance and regional routes is still a key goal.

“We are well aware that we provide an essential service to remote and regional areas, many of which are Indigenous communitie­s,” she said, adding that Via’s trains serve over 400 communitie­s across Canada. “Our continued success, however, requires the renewal of our long-distance, remote, and regional fleet which are now more than 70 years old.”

The streamline­d, stainless steel passenger, observatio­n, dining and sleeper cars used on Via’s long-haul routes were constructe­d by the now-defunct Budd railcar company in the early 1950s, and undergo regular rehabilita­tion and restoratio­n work to keep them on the rails.

Via welcomed 4.1 million passengers in 2023, a nearly 25 per cent increase from the 3.3-million passengers in 2022, but still below the railway’s record high of 5.01 million riders in 2019.

Those 2019 ridership numbers plummeted during the COVID-19 pandemic, falling to just 1.1 million and 1.5 million passengers in 2020 and 2021.

Ninety-six per cent of Via’s passenger trips took place in the busy Windsor to Quebec City commuter corridor, with only three per cent taking rides on their long-haul routes — specifical­ly their Toronto-to-vancouver and Montreal-to-halifax routes — and the remaining one per cent on the operator’s regional lines.

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