Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian Hyperloop Company Says Governments Need To Support Innovation

The Canadian Press, 28 Jun, 2018 12:26 PM
    A Canadian hyperloop company is threatening to relocate its headquarters to Europe unless it gets political support at home for the implementation of its technology that would transport goods and passengers through tubes at airplane speeds.
     
     
    Transpod CEO and co-founder Sebastien Gendron says politicians need to step up if they are serious about supporting innovation in Canada.
     
     
    The company's proposed elevated network of pods would travel through low-pressure tubes at 1,000 kilometres per hour.
     
     
    He says that would cut transit time between Montreal and Toronto to less than an hour and relieve highway and airport congestion.
     
     
    A second line could connect Calgary and Edmonton in about half that time.
     
     
    Gendron says the system could be ready to carry passengers in the early 2030s after first being used for light freight such as e-commerce and perishable food.
     
     
    He says the transportation corridors would be privately owned, likely by Canadian pension funds, construction firms and other investors, while Transpod would supply the technology and pods.
     
     
    The company says it has received interest from such partners but no formal commitments to date.
     
     
    Toronto-based Transpod is competing against billionaires Elon Musk and Richard Branson, who are looking to build their own hyperloop networks.
     
     
    However, Gendron says his company offers better technology and a lower cost per kilometre than its rivals.
     
     
    Construction of a three-kilometre track in France belonging to Transpod and its investors is expected to be ready for testing by next June. A 10-km test track along Highway 7 in Alberta could be ready by 2022 if it wins provincial support. Construction would begin in 2020 and form a section of the eventual transportation corridor.
     
     
    Canadian and European hyperloop companies are developing an international partnership to standardize the methodology and framework to regulate vacuum-based hyperloop travel systems.
     
     
    They want to work with regulators to ensure time isn't wasted in meeting government requirements for certification.
     
     
    Transport Canada says the government is watching the international commercialization of hyperloop technology closely. 
     
     
    A department spokeswoman adds that its Transportation 2030 initiative is working to modernize Canada's transportation sector through updated regulations, investments in infrastructure and the promotion of new transportation technologies.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bollywood Stars Shine In Mukesh Ambani's Party For London Mayor Sadiq Khan

    Bollywood Stars Shine In Mukesh Ambani's Party For London Mayor Sadiq Khan
    Khan was the guest of honour at a party hosted by the Ambanis. The guest list read like a who's who of Mumbai - and some of the most exalted whos of Maximum City belong to Bollywood

    Bollywood Stars Shine In Mukesh Ambani's Party For London Mayor Sadiq Khan

    Premier John Horgan Appoints Former Liberal Minister To Review Wildfire, Flood Responses

    Premier John Horgan Appoints Former Liberal Minister To Review Wildfire, Flood Responses
    VICTORIA — A former Liberal cabinet minister will help review British Columbia's response to wildfire and flood disasters this year that forced thousands from their homes and caused extensive damage.

    Premier John Horgan Appoints Former Liberal Minister To Review Wildfire, Flood Responses

    Funeral Held For Syrian Refugee, 9, Struck And Killed By Bus In Abbotsford, B.C.

    Funeral Held For Syrian Refugee, 9, Struck And Killed By Bus In Abbotsford, B.C.
    HALA ALBARHOUM Arrived In Canada A Year Ago As A Government Sponsored Refugee

    Funeral Held For Syrian Refugee, 9, Struck And Killed By Bus In Abbotsford, B.C.

    Rescuers To End Search For Plane Missing With Two Aboard In Southeastern B.C.

    Rescuers To End Search For Plane Missing With Two Aboard In Southeastern B.C.
    Police have said 28-year-old pilot Dominic Neron and 31-year-old passenger Ashley Bourgeault were flying from Penticton, B.C., to Edmonton on Nov. 25 when the single-engine aircraft vanished

    Rescuers To End Search For Plane Missing With Two Aboard In Southeastern B.C.

    Overdose Emergency Response Centre Set Up In B.C. To Combat Overdose Deaths

    Overdose Emergency Response Centre Set Up In B.C. To Combat Overdose Deaths
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia has established a command centre to provide a co-ordinated response to a provincial overdose crisis in an effort to help people access services that could save their lives.

    Overdose Emergency Response Centre Set Up In B.C. To Combat Overdose Deaths

    Police Identify Alberta Couple As Missing Plane Pilot, Passenger

    Police Identify Alberta Couple As Missing Plane Pilot, Passenger
    PENTICTON, B.C. — Police say the search continues for an Alberta couple who were in a small plane believed to have gone down in southeastern British Columbia.

    Police Identify Alberta Couple As Missing Plane Pilot, Passenger