News & Reviews News Wire Weekly U.S. rail traffic again shows moderate drop

Weekly U.S. rail traffic again shows moderate drop

By Trains Staff | June 29, 2023

| Last updated on February 4, 2024

Figures for last two weeks are smallest declines compared to 2022 since February

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Weekly table showing U.S. carload rail traffic by commodity type, plus intermodal totals
Association of American Railroads

WASHINGTON — Weekly U.S. freight rail traffic remains down, but for a second straight week, the degree of decline seems to be a bit more moderate.

Traffic for the week ending June 24 was 469,453 carloads and intermodal units, a 3.2% drop from the same week in 2022, according to the latest statistics from the Association of American Railroads. The week before, the decline was 3%; those are the two smallest drops since the week of Feb. 4, when traffic was down 1.9% compared to the same week a year earlier.

The latest figures include 2222,431 carloads, down 0.4% compared to the corresponding week in 2022, and 247,022 containers and trailers, down 5.5%.

Year-to-date figures, through 25 weeks of 2023, have carload volume up 0.7% and intermodal traffic down 10.5% for a total decline of 5.4%.

North American volume for the week includes 328,426 carloads, up 1%, and 327,887 intermodal units, down 5.8%. The total volume of 656,313 carloads and intermodal units is down 2.6% compared to the same week in 2022. Through 25 weeks, North American volume is down 4% compared to the same period a year ago.

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