ironyisadeadscene wrote:
what we need is another hoover dam project!
Irony, you are far more correct then you think.
Estimated cost to construct a dual magnetic levatation rail system 12.6 trillion U.S. dollars.
Estimated construction time is 22.1 yrs to complete.
Estimated P&L 20 year operation mark 17.8 trillion U.S. dollars.
Estimated additional revenues (tarrifs 10%, .2% ladder annual use price index) 21 billion U.S. dollars anually.
These are merely the numbers on the passenger and cargo rail buildout. An additional 540 billion dollars to build out energy sources to power the system. This electrical generating system can levy its excess production to population centers and rural areas. Revenue's on this are very difficult to even generalize due to the lack of data on exactly how a rail system of this size would be utilized, but some engineering firms have put out numbers at or around an additional 123 billion U.S. dollars in electricity revenue.
Once again, these numbers are based on 4 east/west high speed rail, 1 track passenger, 1 track cargo (cargo track is larger due to the size of magnets needed to push the weight of the cargo).
San Diego to Jacksonville.
Los Angelos to Charlotte.
San Fransisco to Washington D.C.
Seattle to Boston.
6 runs south to north. No need to specify these. All 10 of these runs will be high speed rail between population centers. Locally, at the county/region level, a smaller mag lev system can and should be built for local transportation needs. These systems construction costs will vary accoring to the size of the system, like wise, the return on investment timeline will vary according to the usage of these local systems.
You wanted a hoover dam type project, here ya go. All can be done in 50 years with full employment and a return on investment with a surplus in a decent time frame.