Canada, the world's second-largest country in total area, is dedicated to having an efficient, high-capacity multimodal transportation spanning often vast distances between natural resource extraction sites, agricultural and urban areas. Canada's transportation system includes more than 1,400,000 kilometres (870,000 mi) of roads, 10 major international airports, 300 smaller airports, 72,093 km (44,797 mi) of functioning railway track, and more than 300 commercial ports and harbours that provide access to the Pacific, Atlantic and Arctic oceans as well as the Great Lakes and the St. Lawrence Seaway.[1] In 2005, the transportation sector made up 4.2% of Canada's GDP, compared to 3.7% for Canada's mining and oil and gas extraction industries.[2]

Transport Canada oversees and regulates most aspects of transportation within federal jurisdiction, including interprovincial transport. This primarily includes rail, air and maritime transportation. Transport Canada is under the direction of the federal government's Minister of Transport. The Transportation Safety Board of Canada is responsible for maintaining transportation safety in Canada by investigating accidents and making safety recommendations.

Gross domestic product, transport industries, 2005[2]
IndustryShare of transportation GDP (%)
Air transportation 9
Rail transportation 13
Water transportation 3
Truck transportation 35
Transit and ground passenger transportation 12
Pipeline transportation 11
Scenic and sightseeing transport / Transport support 17
Total: 100

History

The standard history covers the French regime, fur traders, the canals, and early roads, and gives extensive attention to the railways.[3]

European contact

Prior to the arrival of European settlers, Aboriginal peoples in Canada walked. They also used canoes, kayaks, umiaks and Bull Boats, in addition to the snowshoe, toboggan and sled in winter. They had no wheeled vehicles, and no animals larger than dogs.

Europeans adopted canoes as they pushed deeper into the continent's interior, and were thus able to travel via the waterways that fed from the St. Lawrence River and Hudson Bay.[4]

In the 19th century and early 20th century transportation relied on harnessing oxen to Red River ox carts or horse to wagon. Maritime transportation was via manual labour such as canoe or wind on sail. Water or land travel speeds was approximately 8 to 15 km/h (5 to 9 mph).[5]

Settlement was along river routes. Agricultural commodities were perishable, and trade centres were within 50 km (31 mi). Rural areas centred around villages, and they were approximately 10 km (6 mi) apart. The advent of steam railways and steamships connected resources and markets of vast distances in the late 19th century.[5] Railways also connected city centres, in such a way that the traveller went by sleeper, railway hotel, to the cities. Crossing the country by train took four or five days, as it still does by car. People generally lived within 5 mi (8 km) of the downtown core thus the train could be used for inter-city travel and the tram for commuting.

The advent of the interstate or Trans-Canada Highway in Canada in 1963 established ribbon development, truck stops, and industrial corridors along throughways.

Evolution

Different parts of the country are shut off from each other by Cabot Strait, the Strait of Belle Isle, by areas of rough, rocky forest terrain, such as the region lying between New Brunswick and Quebec, the areas north of Lakes Huron and Superior, dividing the industrial region of Ontario and Quebec from the agricultural areas of the prairies, and the barriers interposed by the mountains of British Columbia

The Canada Year Book 1956[6]

The Federal Department of Transport (established November 2, 1936) supervised railways, canals, harbours, marine and shipping, civil aviation, radio and meteorology. The Transportation Act of 1938 and the amended Railway Act, placed control and regulation of carriers in the hands of the Board of Transport commissioners for Canada. The Royal Commission on Transportation was formed December 29, 1948, to examine transportation services to all areas of Canada to eliminate economic or geographic disadvantages. The commission also reviewed the Railway Act to provide uniform yet competitive freight-rates.[6]

Roads

The Trans-Canada highway in Chilliwack, BC

There is a total of 1,042,300 km (647,700 mi) of roads in Canada, of which 415,600 km (258,200 mi) are paved, including 17,000 km (11,000 mi) of expressways (the third-longest collection in the world, behind the Interstate Highway System of the United States and China's National Trunk Highway System). As of 2008, 626,700 km (389,400 mi) were unpaved.[7]

In 2009, there were 20,706,616 road vehicles registered in Canada, of which 96% were vehicles under 4.5 tonnes (4.4 long tons; 5.0 short tons), 2.4% were vehicles between 4.5 and 15 tonnes (4.4 and 14.8 long tons; 5.0 and 16.5 short tons) and 1.6% were 15 tonnes (15 long tons; 17 short tons) or greater. These vehicles travelled a total of 333.29 billion kilometres, of which 303.6 billion was for vehicles under 4.5 tonnes, 8.3 billion was for vehicles between 4.5 and 15 tonnes and 21.4 billion was for vehicles over 15 tonnes. For the 4.5- to 15-tonne trucks, 88.9% of vehicle-kilometres were intra-province trips, 4.9% were inter-province, 2.8% were between Canada and the US and 3.4% made outside of Canada. For the trucks over 15 tonnes, 59.1% of vehicle-kilometres were intra-province trips, 20% inter-province trips, 13.8% Canada-US trips and 7.1% trips made outside of Canada.[8]

Ambassador Bridge between Windsor, Ontario and Detroit, Michigan has a quarter of US-Canada trade cross over it.

Canada's vehicles consumed a total of 31.4 million cubic metres (198 Mbbl) of gasoline and 9.91 million cubic metres (62.3 Mbbl) of diesel.[8] Trucking generated 35% of the total GDP from transport, compared to 25% for rail, water and air combined (the remainder being generated by the industry's transit, pipeline, scenic and support activities).[2] Hence roads are the dominant means of passenger and freight transport in Canada.

Roads and highways were managed by provincial and municipal authorities until construction of the Northwest Highway System (the Alaska Highway) and the Trans-Canada Highway project initiation. The Alaska Highway of 1942 was constructed during World War II for military purposes connecting Fort St. John, British Columbia with Fairbanks, Alaska.[6] The transcontinental highway, a joint national and provincial expenditure, was begun in 1949 under the initiation of the Trans Canada Highway Act on December 10, 1949. The 7,821-kilometre (4,860 mi) highway was completed in 1962 at a total expenditure of $1.4 billion.[9]

Internationally, Canada has road links with both the lower 48 US states and Alaska. The Ministry of Transportation maintains the road network in Ontario and also employs Ministry of Transport Enforcement Officers for the purpose of administering the Canada Transportation Act and related regulations.[10][11] The Department of Transportation in New Brunswick performs a similar task in that province as well.

Regulations enacted in regards to Canada highways are the 1971 Motor Vehicle Safety Act[12] and the 1990 Highway Traffic Act.[13]

The safety of Canada's roads is moderately good by international standards, and is improving both in terms of accidents per head of population and per billion vehicle kilometers.[14]

Air transport

Air transportation made up 9% of the transport sector's GDP generation in 2005. Canada's largest air carrier and its flag carrier is Air Canada, which had 34 million customers in 2006 and, as of April 2010, operates 363 aircraft (including Air Canada Jazz).[15] CHC Helicopter, the largest commercial helicopter operator in the world, is second with 142 aircraft[15] and WestJet, a low-cost carrier formed in 1996, is third with 100 aircraft.[15] Canada's airline industry saw significant change following the signing of the US-Canada open skies agreement in 1995, when the marketplace became less regulated and more competitive.[16]

The Canadian Transportation Agency employs transportation enforcement officers to maintain aircraft safety standards, and conduct periodic aircraft inspections, of all air carriers.[17] The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority is charged with the responsibility for the security of air traffic within Canada. In 1994 the National Airports Policy was enacted[18]

Principal airports

Of over 1,800 registered Canadian aerodromes, certified airports, heliports, and floatplane bases,[19] 26 are specially designated under Canada's National Airports System[20] (NAS): these include all airports that handle 200,000 or more passengers each year, as well as the principal airport serving each federal, provincial, and territorial capital. However, since the introduction of the policy only one, Iqaluit Airport, has been added and no airports have been removed despite dropping below 200,000 passengers.[21] The Government of Canada, with the exception of the three territorial capitals, retains ownership of these airports and leases them to local authorities. The next tier consists of 64 regional/local airports formerly owned by the federal government, most of which have now been transferred to other owners (most often to municipalities).[20]

Below is a table of Canada's ten biggest airports by passenger traffic in 2019.

Toronto Pearson, Canada's busiest airport
Vancouver International Airport
RankAirportLocationTotal passengersAnnual change
1Toronto Pearson International AirportToronto50,499,431[22]2.0%
2Vancouver International AirportVancouver26,395,820[23]1.8%
3Montréal-Pierre Elliott Trudeau International AirportMontreal20,305,106[24]4.5%
4Calgary International AirportCalgary17,957,780[25]3.5%
5Edmonton International AirportEdmonton8,151,532[26]1.2%
6Ottawa Macdonald–Cartier International AirportOttawa5,106,487[27]0.1%
7Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International AirportWinnipeg4,484,249[28]0.0%
8Halifax Stanfield International AirportHalifax4,188,443[29]3.0%
9Billy Bishop Toronto City AirportToronto-
10Kelowna International AirportKelowna2,032,144[30]1.3%

Railways

A CPR freight train in Rogers Pass

In 2007, Canada had a total of 72,212 km (44,870 mi)[31] of freight and passenger railway, of which 31 km (19 mi) is electrified. While intercity passenger transportation by rail is now very limited, freight transport by rail remains common. Total revenues of rail services in 2006 was $10.4 billion, of which only 2.8% was from passenger services. In a year are usually earned about $11 billion, of which 3.2% is from passengers and the rest from freight. The Canadian National Railway and Canadian Pacific Kansas City are Canada's two major freight railway companies, each having operations throughout North America. In 2007, 357 billion tonne-kilometres of freight were transported by rail, and 4.33 million passengers travelled 1.44 billion passenger-kilometres (an almost negligible amount compared to the 491 billion passenger-kilometres made in light road vehicles). 34,281 people were employed by the rail industry in the same year.[32]

Nationwide passenger services are provided by the federal crown corporation Via Rail. Three Canadian cities have commuter rail services: in the Montreal area by Exo, in the Toronto area by GO Transit, and in the Vancouver area by West Coast Express. Smaller railways such as Ontario Northland, Rocky Mountaineer, and Algoma Central also run passenger trains to remote rural areas.

In Canada railways are served by standard gauge, 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm), rails. See also track gauge in Canada.

Canada has railway links with the lower 48 US States, but no connection with Alaska, although a line has been proposed.[33] There are no other international rail connections.

Waterways

The Port of Vancouver, Canada's busiest port

In 2005, 139.2 million tonnes (137.0 million long tons; 153.4 million short tons) of cargo was loaded and unloaded at Canadian ports.[34] The Port of Vancouver is the busiest port in Canada, moving 68 million tonnes (67 million long tons; 75 million short tons) or 15% of Canada's total in domestic and international shipping in 2003.[35]

Transport Canada oversees most of the regulatory functions related to marine registration,[36] safety of large vessel,[37] and port pilotage duties.[38] Many of Canada's port facilities are in the process of being divested from federal responsibility to other agencies or municipalities.[39]

Inland waterways comprise 3,000 km (1,900 mi), including the St. Lawrence Seaway. Transport Canada enforces acts and regulations governing water transportation and safety.[40]

Container traffic in Canadian ports, 2006[41]
RankPortProvinceTEUsBoxesContainerized cargo (tonnes)
1VancouverBritish Columbia2,207,7301,282,80717,640,024
2MontrealQuebec1,288,910794,73511,339316
3HalifaxNova Scotia530,722311,0654,572,020
4St. John'sNewfoundland and Labrador118,00855,475512,787
5Fraser RiverBritish Columbia94,651N/A742,783
6Saint JohnNew Brunswick44,56624,982259,459
7TorontoOntario24,58524,585292,834

Ferry services

Welland Canal, Port Weller, Lock #1

Canals

The main route canals of Canada are those of the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes. The others are subsidiary canals.

Ports and harbours

The National Harbours Board administered Halifax, Saint John, Chicoutimi, Trois-Rivières, Churchill, and Vancouver until 1983. At one time, over 300 harbours across Canada were supervised by the Department of Transport.[6] A program of divestiture was implemented around the turn of the millennium, and as of 2014, 493 of the 549 sites identified for divestiture in 1995 have been sold or otherwise transferred,[43] as indicated by a DoT list.[44] The government maintains an active divestiture programme,[45] and after divestiture Transport Canada oversees only 17 Canada Port Authorities for the 17 largest shipping ports.[46][47]

Merchant marine

Canada's merchant marine comprised a total of 173 ships (1,000 gross tonnage (GT) or over) 2,129,243 GT or 716,340 tonnes deadweight (DWT) at the end of 2007.[7]

Pipelines

The TransCanada pipeline route

Pipelines are part of the energy extraction and transportation network of Canada and are used to transport natural gas, natural gas liquids, crude oil, synthetic crude and other petroleum based products. Canada has 23,564 km (14,642 mi) of pipeline for transportation of crude and refined oil, and 74,980 km (46,590 mi) for liquefied petroleum gas.[7]

Public transit

Some North American cities arranged by size along the horizontal axis and public transportation use on the vertical axis.
Montreal Metro's McGill station during rush hour

Most Canadian cities have public transport, if only a bus system. Three Canadian cities have rapid transit systems, four have light rail systems, and three have commuter rail systems (see below). In 2016, 12.4% of Canadians used public transportation to get to work. This compares to 79.5% that got to work using a car (67.4% driving alone, 12.1% as part of a carpool), 5.5% that walked and 1.4% that rode a bike.[48]

Government organizations across Canada owned 17,852 buses of various types in 2016. Organizations in Ontario (38.8%) and Quebec (21.9%) accounted for just over three-fifths of the country's total bus fleet. Urban municipalities owned more than 85% of all buses.

in 2016, diesel buses were the leading bus type in Canada (65.9%), followed by bio-diesel (18.1%) and hybrid (9.4%) buses. Electric, natural gas and other buses collectively accounted for the remaining 6.6%.

Rapid transit systems

There are three rapid transit systems operating in Canada: the Montreal Metro, the Toronto subway, and the Vancouver SkyTrain.

Rapid transit in Canada
Location Transit Weekday daily ridership Length/stations
Montreal, Quebec Montreal Metro 1,254,700 (Q4 2016)[49] 69.2 km (43.0 mi) / 68
Toronto, Ontario Toronto subway 1,207,300 (Q4 2016)[49] 76.9 km (47.8 mi) / 75
Vancouver, British Columbia SkyTrain 454,600 (December 2016)[50] 79.6 km (49.5 mi) / 53

There is also an airport circulator, the Link Train, at Toronto Pearson International Airport. It operates 24 hours a day, 7 days a week and is wheelchair-accessible. It is free of cost.

Light rail systems

There are light rail systems in four cities – the Calgary CTrain, the Edmonton LRT, the Ottawa O-Train, and Waterloo Region's Ion – while Toronto has an extensive streetcar system.

Light rail transit in Canada
Location Transit Weekday daily ridership Length/stations
Toronto, Ontario Toronto streetcar system 530,600 (Q4 2019)[51] 82 km (51 mi) / 685[52]
Calgary, Alberta CTrain 313,800 (Q4 2019)[51] 59.9 km (37.2 mi) / 45[53]
Edmonton, Alberta Edmonton LRT 113,804 (2019)[54] 37.4 km (23.2 mi) / 29
Ottawa, Ontario O-Train 159,000 (Q4 2019)[55] 20.5 km (12.7 mi) / 18
Waterloo Region, Ontario Ion rapid transit N/A 19 km (12 mi) / 19

The 2016 Canada's Core Public Infrastructure Survey from Statistics Canada found that all of Canada's 247 streetcars were owned by the City of Toronto. The vast majority (87.9%) of these streetcars were purchased from 1970 to 1999, while 12.1% were purchased in 2016. Reflecting the age of the streetcars, 88.0% were reported to be in very poor condition, while 12.0% were reported to be in good condition.

Commuter train systems

Commuter trains serve the cities and surrounding areas of Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver:

Commuter train systems in Canada
Location Transit Daily ridership System length
Toronto, Ontario GO Transit 187,000 (2013)[56] 390 km (240 mi)[57]
Montreal, Quebec Agence métropolitaine de transport 83,100 (Q2 2013)[58] 214 km (133 mi)
Vancouver, British Columbia West Coast Express 11,100 (Q2 2013)[58] 69 km (43 mi)[59]

See also

References

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  2. 1 2 3 "An Analysis of the Transportation Sector in 2005" (PDF). Statistics Canada. Archived from the original (PDF) on April 9, 2008. Retrieved March 27, 2008.
  3. G.P. de T. Glazebrook, A history of transportation in Canada (1938; reprinted 1969)
  4. Virtual Vault, an online exhibition of Canadian historical art at Library and Archives Canada
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  6. 1 2 3 4 Howe, C.D. (1956). "The Official Handbook of Present Conditions and Recent Progress". Canada Year Book – Information Services Division – Dominion Bureau of Statistics. Ottawa, Ontario: Kings Printer and Controller of Stationery: 713 to 791.
  7. 1 2 3 "Canada". The World Factbook (2024 ed.). Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved January 13, 2011. (Archived 2011 edition)
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  13. "Highway Traffic Act". Retrieved January 18, 2008.
  14. "Transport in Canada". International Transport Statistics Database. iRAP. Retrieved October 6, 2008.
  15. 1 2 3 Transport Canada listing of aircraft owned by Air Canada and Air Canada Jazz Archived July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine (enter Air Canada (226 aircraft), Jazz Air LP (137 aircraft), Canadian Helicopters or Westjet in the box titled "Owner Name")
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  18. "National Airports Policy". Archived from the original on November 21, 2007. Retrieved January 18, 2008.
  19. Canada Flight Supplement. Effective 0901Z 16 July 2020 to 0901Z 10 September 2020.
  20. 1 2 "Airport Divestiture Status Report". Tc.gc.ca. January 12, 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2011.
  21. "Airports in the national airports category (Appendix A)". Tc.gc.ca. December 16, 2010. Archived from the original on June 7, 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2011.
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  29. "Halifax Stanfield Proudly Serves More Than Four Million Passengers for Third Consecutive Year". Halifax Stanfield International Airport. Halifax International Airport Authority. February 4, 2020. Retrieved February 4, 2020.
  30. "YLW Facts & statistics". ylw.kelowna.ca. Retrieved January 31, 2020.
  31. Statistics Canada. "Rail transportation, length of track operated for freight and passenger transportation, by province and territory". statcan.ca. Statistics Canada. Archived from the original on October 4, 2008. Retrieved March 13, 2009.
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  38. Transport Canada. "Marine Personnel Standards and Pilotage". Transport Canada. Retrieved October 1, 2007.
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  42. "Discover Our Routes | BC Ferries". www.bcferries.com. Retrieved August 19, 2021.
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  44. tc.gc.ca: "Deproclamation Notice Subsection 2(1)" Archived August 15, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
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  47. tc.gc.ca: "Ports", archive.org March 3, 2009
  48. "Journey to work: Key results from the 2016 Census". Statistics Canada. November 29, 2017.
  49. 1 2 "Public Transportation Ridership Report - Fourth Quarter, 2016" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. March 3, 2017. Archived from the original (PDF) on March 20, 2017. Retrieved May 15, 2017.
  50. 1 2 "APTA Public Transportation Ridership Report" (PDF). American Public Transportation Association. 2019. Archived (PDF) from the original on May 10, 2020. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  51. Represents number of stops, per TTC website 2013 operating statistics.
  52. "About Calgary Transit / Facts and Figures / Statistics". Calgary Transit. City of Calgary. 2015. Retrieved July 17, 2015.
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  54. Manconi, John (General Manager, Transportation Services) (January 23, 2020). Special Transit Commission meeting - January 23, 2020 (Audio Recording). 13 minutes in. Retrieved May 9, 2020.
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  56. GO by the numbers Archived January 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 17, 2009.
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  58. West Coast Express: Stations and Parking Information Retrieved December 9, 2009.

Further reading

  • Brown, Ron. Rails Across the Prairies: The Railway Heritage of Canada's Prairie Provinces (Dundurn, 2012)
  • Currie, Archibald William. Economics of Canadian transportation (U of Toronto Press, 1954.)
  • Daniels, Rudolph L. Trains across the continent: North American railroad history (Indiana University Press, 2000)
  • Glazebrook, G.P. de T. A history of transportation in Canada (1938; reprinted 1969), The standard scholarly history
  • McCalla, Robert J. Water Transportation in Canada (1994)
  • McIlwraith, Thomas F. "Transportation in Old Ontario." American Review of Canadian Studies 14.2 (1984): 177–192.
  • Pigott, Peter. Canada: The History (2014); Pigott has numerous books on aviation in Canada
  • Schreiner, John. Transportation: The evolution of Canada's networks (McGraw-Hill Ryerson, 1972)
  • Stagg, Ronald. The Golden Dream: A History of the St. Lawrence Seaway (Dundurn, 2010)
  • Willoughby, William R. The St. Lawrence waterway: a study in politics and diplomacy (University of Wisconsin Press, 1961)
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