Skip to main content

Canada: doubts persist about proposed Howse Pass highway through Rocky Mountains

Alberta group attempts to revive the idea of a Howse Pass highway.
By David Arminas March 11, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
A Howse Pass road: beautiful but too costly (© Keeperofthezoo | Dreamstime.com)

The Provincial British Columbia government in western Canada has thrown cold water on the revived idea of building another major highway over the Rocky Mountains.

British Columbia – whose eastern territory is comprised mostly of the Rocky Mountain range – says the proposed Howse Pass shortcut from the neighbouring province of Alberta would be too costly. Also, the government is in the midst of major mountain road widening programme costing billions, according to reports by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

The BC government was responding to comments by John Vandermeer, chairman of the Central Alberta Economic Partnership. He recently told media in Alberta that the huis organisation would like to undertake an economic development study for the region, which would include a reassessment of the viability of the Howse Pass route. It would run from central Alberta to the city of Kamloops in south-central British Columbia.

The 760km-drive from the central Alberta city of Red Deer to Kamloops starts by heading south to Calgary and then into BC. A Howse Pass route, touching 1,540m above sea level, would take drivers directly west from Red Deer into the Rockies and Banff National Park before crossing into BC. There are not towns or cites along this route which would be built through mostly wilderness areas in BC.

Howse Pass would, however, shave 94km off the southern Calgary route and join the Trans-Canada Highway near the BC town of Golden. The importance of all major roads across the mountains is access to the Pacific ports, mainly Vancouver, on the BC coast.

Vandermeer said a number of central Alberta municipal leaders are interested in the potential economic boost to central Alberta should a new mountain route be available.

But environmental groups are likely fight a Howse Pass route. It would also be tricky getting federal government permission because 34km of the route would pass through the federally-run world-renowned Banff National Park, a mostly wilderness area covering nearly 6,650km² and bordering BC.

Related Content

  • Slovak government stands firm over R2 Expressway, including Soroska Tunnel
    August 11, 2017
    Jan Durisin, head of Slovakia’s motorway operator NDS, has said that the R2 expressway, will go ahead despite watchdog fears of poor value for money. Completion of the R2, that includes the Soroska Tunnel, remains 2024, he told Slovakian news agencies. NDS, he said, will start looking for a contractor to start work in 2018 on a stretch of the expressway near the town of Roznava. R2 is a 360km route that will run from Kosice in the east across the country to Trenčín, near the Czech border in the west. It wil
  • Poland's ambitious highway construction plans
    July 10, 2012
    The European football championships are among a number of things pushing Poland's ambitious highway building programme. Patrick Smith reports. Poland is planning to spend a colossal €4.57 billion on road projects in 2009, a 35% increase over the previous year. T
  • Oxford to Cambridge route proposed
    August 22, 2016
    A major new highway project connecting the UK’s university cities of Oxford and Cambridge has been proposed. A new study by the Department for Transport (DfT) has set out the case to improve connections between Oxford, Milton Keynes and Cambridge. The Oxford to Cambridge expressway strategic study is one of a number of studies aimed at addressing some of the biggest challenges facing the road network in the UK. The study has been carried out by WSP | Parsons Brinckerhoff, CH2M and Steer Davies Gleave.
  • Software innovations aid road design
    February 24, 2012
    As an aid to design, construction software continues to be a foundation stone in new project development. Autodesk is working with the Incheon Free Economic Zone (IFEZ) and the Incheon Urban Development Corporation (IUDC) to cooperate in the creation of Asia's first Digital City for Incheon.