Latest news with #shortline
Yahoo
22-07-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
BNSF aims to grow carload traffic with rail service upgrades
BNSF Railway carries more intermodal, coal, and grain traffic than any other railroad. And now it's looking to boost its relatively small carload network through a combination of improved service, more frequent customer switching, and tighter partnerships with its top short line connections. 'We know intermodal's a big part of the growth future. We've developed the ag [agriculture] shuttle network on the bulk side, and we certainly like our bulk network,' BNSF Chief Marketing Officer Tom Williams said in a recent interview. 'I don't want it to be lost that we care very much about that single-car merchandise network, too.' Over the past year BNSF has taken steps to improve the efficiency of its merchandise network, starting with pushing down terminal dwell at its hump yards and emphasizing on-time train departures. Those efforts paid off as BNSF posted all-time best terminal dwell figures in May. For the second quarter, terminal dwell was 21.9 hours, a 17% improvement compared to the second quarter of 2024. And — bucking the long-term industry trend — BNSF has increased service frequency for 225 of its merchandise customers. A carload facility that received three days of service per week, for example, might now see a BNSF local on its spurs five days a week. Some five-day-per-week customers, meanwhile, went to daily service. 'And that, in total, equates to about 21,000 additional annualized service days per year,' Williams said. The hope is that the more frequent local service will lead to volume growth once the industrial economy rebounds. The railway's Short Line Select program, rolled out last fall to improve interchange performance, has cut dwell nearly in half on participating short lines. Volume on the Short Line Select railroads is up around 5% this year, compared to flat volumes on other short line connections as well as the balance of BNSF's merchandise business. 'The whole name of the game of what we've been doing in the merchandise network is improving the velocity,' Williams said. The combination of more efficient terminals and more frequent local service helps cars spin faster from origin to destination and return. Car-miles per day are up 25% compared to a year ago, which shaves two days off the transit time for a car that moves 1,000 miles. What this means is that customers can move the same amount of freight using fewer cars, or put their suddenly surplus cars to work hauling more freight. 'It's good for us, it's good for the customers,' Williams said. 'We've reduced the inventory year over year by 20%.' Amid these operational improvements, BNSF in June introduced a new First Mile/Last Mile group that includes the 13 people from its Shortline Development and Industrial Products Business Development teams. Their focus is on understanding the needs of BNSF's merchandise customers. 'This isn't about us going to the customer and telling them this is our network and … you fit it or you don't,' Williams said. Rather, BNSF wants to collaborate with its carload customers, learn how rail fits into their supply chains, and how local service tweaks could better fit their needs and lead to growth, he explained. Short Line Select, meanwhile, aims to tighten the commercial relationship with top connecting railroads. Participating lines include Genesee & Wyoming's Alabama & Gulf Coast Railway, Burlington Junction Railway, Genesee & Wyoming's Portland & Western Railway, TNW Corporation's Texas Northwestern Railroad and Red River Valley & Western, and Watco's Timber Rock Railroad. 'One-third of our carload freight originates or terminates on a short line,' said Mark Ganaway, who leads BNSF's shortline team. 'That's a significant portion of our business. We needed a way to move from transactional relationships to strategic partnerships.' Last year BNSF handled 2.43 million merchandise carloads, a figure that does not include coal or grain. 'Interchanging more than 260,000 carloads per year, G&W and BNSF have an outstanding partnership. Having two G&W railroads — Alabama & Gulf Coast Railway in the east and Portland & Western Railroad in the west — participate in the BNSF Shortline Select program is a natural step in the evolution of our relationship,' said Kimberly Thompson, a vice president of sales and marketing at G&W. 'BNSF's program taps into the strengths of both a Class I and a short line to broaden both of our market reach and drive more traffic to rail as a safer and more sustainable alternative to trucking.' BNSF is adding shortline transload locations to its Premier Transload Program directory. It's also expanding its Certified Sites to include locations on short lines. The sites are rail-served properties that are ready for development. Among them: A site in the Mobile Gateway Park on the AGR in Alabama and a site on the Portland & Western that's 45 miles north of Portland and will emphasize import/export containerized traffic. The next step in BNSF's merchandise growth efforts will be improving the suite of technology tools that customers use to interact with the railroad, said Williams. Traditionally, BNSF has purchased off-the-shelf technology applications. Now it's building an in-house tech team that will develop BNSF-specific systems. Customers should see improvements rolled out over the next six to 18 months, Williams said. Subscribe to FreightWaves' Rail e-newsletter and get the latest insights on rail freight right in your Goldman Sachs advising BNSF on potential merger Analysis: UP-NS rail merger spotlights individual legacies in a legacy business Union Pacific, Norfolk Southern in merger talks: WSJ Report: Investment firm advising Union Pacific on potential rail merger The post BNSF aims to grow carload traffic with rail service upgrades appeared first on FreightWaves. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data


CTV News
13-06-2025
- Business
- CTV News
Sask. shortline railways say provincial funding appreciated but not enough
Shortline railways in Saskatchewan say they need more provincial dollars. The NDP also want to see small rails receive more. (WayneMantyka/CTVNews) The Saskatchewan NDP is calling for more shortline railway funding from the province as currently 13 small railway companies share $1 million annually. NDP leader Carla Beck brought small railways' concerns to the forefront on Thursday. Shortline railways maintain service on lines abandoned by major railroads. 'We've been talking about the need to build rail lines and pipelines and powerlines, but that rail line has to include investing in shortline infrastructure,' Beck said. There are 13 shortline railways operating in Saskatchewan and some say they are only marginally profitable even with the provincial funding. 'We're the first mile and the last mile, so our job is to put producer car and agriculture products like fertilizer, give them a spot where they can load and unload and get that product to a market without having to go to your Viterra or your P&H or your big companies,' Glenn Pohl, from Xpert Rail Consulting said. Shortline railroads say they are also keeping heavy truck traffic off roads and provide grain producers with more options. 'It takes the burden off the highways that we are feeling out there,' Pohl said. 'It's two and a half truckloads per railcar and when you look at a railcar going down the track you see lots of them.' Shortline railways in Saskatchewan say they appreciate the $1 million they receive annually from the province but would like to see the amount at least doubled. Even then, many feel it would only be enough to rebuild about one mile of Saskatchewan shortline railway.