In August of 2020 Tunnel Business Magazine published an eye-opening analysis of the exorbitantly high cost of US tunnels when compared with similar underground infrastructure projects around the world. The first and worst case cited was New York City’s Second Avenue Subway which opened to the public on January 1, 2017 after racking up an astronomical cost of $2.5B per mile. That’s 2.5 billion US dollars per mile, not millions, just to be clear.
Nasri Munfah, a Senior Vice President and the Director of Tunneling and Underground Engineering Center of Excellence for AECOM and his colleague and co-author Paul Nicholas, the Vice President and the Operations Manager for the AECOM Tunnel Practice, bring a combined 80 years of tunnel construction field experience to their analysis in the informative article Why Tunnels in The US Cost Much More Than Anywhere Else in The World.
AECOM is one of the world’s industry-leading infrastructure consulting firms with an impressive list of accomplishments including:
- Ranking at #1 in Engineering News-Record’s 2020 “Top 200 Environmental Firms”.
- Ranking again at #1 on the “Top 500 Design Firms” list for the Transportation and General Building category in Engineering News-Record 2020.
- Named by Fortune magazine as one of the “World’s Most Admired Companies” for the sixth consecutive year.
- Generated $13.6 billion of Professional Services revenue during fiscal year 2019.
- Listed at #163 in the Fortune 500.
For this cost analysis the AECOM tunnel experts focused on underground transit projects where the twin bore tunnels have inside diameters in the range of 20 ft (6 m) to 22 ft (6.7 m). So how is it that the Mumbai Metro Line project came in at just $100-150 million per mile while New York’s East Side Access tunnel planned for 2022 is projected to rack up a whopping $1.8 to 3 billion per mile tab? Why are tunnel projects in India up to 20 times cheaper than projects in the US? Only Australia comes close to matching the other parts of the US aside from New York in average cost per mile at $600-900 million.
Cost Comparisons For Tunnels Around the World
In Europe and the Middle East the cost per mile for transit tunnel infrastructure is a comparatively modest $250-500 million per mile, less than half the expense of a similar project in New York. While prices around the globe have obvious factors that contribute to the variations in cost per mile, the prices for fixed materials in the permanent tunnel structures can’t be blamed for the incredible cost/mile totals in the US and Australia.
As the AECOM tunnel experts Nicholas and Munfah point out in their article, concrete, rebar, track, and electro-metrical systems material prices for transit tunnel projects are about the same all over the world. The cost breakdown for tunnel projects in the US is:
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- 35% are Soft Costs that include the owner cost, preconstruction costs including EIS/EA, (Environmental Impact) feasibility studies, program management consulting, design consulting, construction management talent, obtaining right of way easements, permits, insurance, financing, and bonding.
- 10% are Third-Party Costs including utility diversions, remedial work, and stakeholders’ commitments.
- 55% Construction Cost of which labor alone accounts for 40-50%, with the remainder of construction cost spread across permanent material at just 15% to 18% and construction material, temporary works, and consumables, totalling 10% to 12%. Contractor construction equipment including tunnel boring machines (TBM) accounts for a mere 18% to 20% of total construction cost.
So why are Australia and the US paying such a high toll to complete essential tunnel projects in urban environments that are more densely populated every year?
Red Tape and Green Tape Send US Tunnel Costs Through the Roof
Once again the legacy of environmental overreach from decades of recklessly ambitious “green” regulation rears its ugly head. The US and Australia both have significant and similarly rigorous environmental requirements in place that can account for nearly half (45%) of tunnel construction costs. While elsewhere in the world environmental regulations can be no less rigorous, review and reporting practices for compliance are much more efficient and streamlined.
In the US, cutting the green tape for new tunnel infrastructure involves quite a bit in the way of billable hours for legal, administrative, and labor expertise required for:
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- EIS/EIR requirements- Environmental Impact Statements and Environmental Impact Reports and the high cost of generating these reports in compliance with federal, state, and local regulations add significant expense. New York’s Second Avenue Subway has been subjected to decades-long evaluations and impact studies going all the way back to the 1950s. The East Side Access Tunnel in New York has been in the planning and evaluation stages since the 1960s. Inflation alone means that these projects end up costing nearly 9 times more than when they were first planned, considering that $1 in 1960 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $8.78 in 2020, a difference of $7.78 over 60 years.
- Right-of-Way permitting in urban areas, where tunnels are most needed for mass transit that reduces pollution and environmental impact in crowded cities such as New York, San Francisco, or Los Angeles, is time consuming to obtain and adds significant legal and administrative costs.
- The highest cost of labor for tunnel projects is unmatched by New York’s Sandhogs Union which can reach $110/hour, (and 2-3 times that for overtime) with union regulations that require as many as 4 times more than the number of tunnel workers assigned to comparable projects in Europe. In California the average cost is $70/hour, as compared to Germany’s $30/hour for qualified tunnel personnel.
- Politically Driven Stop and Start construction can kill underground construction projects such as the Superconductor SuperCollider in Texas which was terminated even after 60% of construction was complete. This happens when funding is diverted to more politically preferred projects over time. In Europe tunnel project funding is usually 100% in place before construction begins. In the US federal funds earmarked for new projects are often diverted to repair old and crumbling infrastructure as Resource Erectors reported back in 2019.
Solutions For Controlling Skyrocketing Costs in Underground Construction
The AECOM experts put “Streamline the environmental and approval processes.” right at the top of their list for controlling tunnel project costs. They also propose that equitable Project Labor Agreements can keep labor rates and union regulations within reason.
They also recommend that Transportation Alternative Program costs for green sustainability goals including such diverse public amenities as on and off-road pedestrian and bicycle facilities, infrastructure projects for improving non-driver access to public transportation and enhanced mobility, community improvement activities etc, should certainly be achieved for sustainability but they should be independently financed and not included in transit project costs or funding.
And the last but not least recommendation from 2 of the world’s leading tunnel experts?
Remove politics from infrastructure projects.
About Resource Erectors
At Resource Erectors we’ve seen this all-too-common theme in overreaching green government regulation affecting industries across the board in the US and around the world, from mining and civil construction, minerals and processing, to precious metals and manufacturing. We even have a green energy blog archive to keep tabs on the merits as well as the myths of sustainable green policies that affect our industry partners and professionals. And we always keep a close eye on infrastructure spending trends.
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