February 9, 2010

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Rail Traffic Edges Up

The Journal of Commerce Online - News Story
Coal shipments fall, but wide range of other commodities rise

Traffic edged higher for major U.S. railroads in the week ending Oct. 24, as both carloads and intermodal pickups rose from a week earlier, said the Association of American Railroads.

The U.S. operations of the seven Class I carriers, plus a few regional railroads that report to the AAR, originated 276,357 carloads of bulk commodities and equipment, up from 275,545 in the week ending Oct. 17.

The AAR-reporting lines loaded 207,401 intermodal units – roughly 85 percent of them containers and 15 percent trailers – in the Oct. 24 week, up from 206,139 the previous week.

Shipments of coal, the largest cargo for large railroads, fell last week. But the carriers had stronger loadings across a range of other carload shipment types including motor vehicles and equipment, construction base materials like stone and sand, grain, chemicals and scrap.

Measured in ton-miles, major rail traffic in the Oct. 24 week was down 13.4 percent from a year earlier, improved from a 13.9 percent year-over-year drop a week earlier.

Contact John D. Boyd at jboyd@joc.com.

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