CN is capacity-constrained on its main line linking Edmonton, Alberta, and Chicago due to stronger-than-expected traffic growth, primarily shipments of intermodal and frac sand.
The railroad accelerated capital projects to ease some pinch points before winter set in, Chief Financial Officer Ghislain Houle told the Credit Suisse Industrials Conference last week. These include siding extensions and connecting sidings to form double-track; yard bypasses and frac sand support-yard expansions in Wisconsin; and adding track and cranes to intermodal terminals in Toronto.
CN will have more projects shovel-ready when spring arrives, and has ordered turnouts and other equipment so it will be ready to go as soon as the ground thaws, he says.
CN has the best long-siding network in the industry, Houle says, with 188 sidings across the system that can handle trains of 10,000 to 12,000 feet. It was smart to continue extending sidings when traffic fell in 2016, he adds, noting that some analysts were critical of the railway’s capital spending during a downturn.
The addition of crews, power, and yard and mainline capacity will help CN improve service and return key operating metrics to normal by the middle of 2018, officials say.
But CN will continue to boost capacity because its goal is to grow faster than the overall economy.
“All boats rise with the tide. You’d like to do better than what the tide gives you,” CN Chief Marketing Officer Jean-Jacques Ruest told the RailTrends 2017 conference last week.
CN is certainly outperforming the economy at its Western Canadian ports of Vancouver and Prince Rupert, B.C.
The Prince Rupert container-port expansion, completed in the fall, boosted capacity by 60 percent, to 1.35 million twenty-foot equivalent units. CN and its port partners expected the expanded container-port to operate at 80 percent of capacity by 2020.
It’s already at 75 percent, Houle says, as Prince Rupert container traffic grew 36 percent in the third quarter.
A recently completed containerport expansion at Vancouver’s Delatport helped drive a 29-percent rise in CN’s intermodal traffic at Canada’s largest port, where it handles 70 percent of container shipments.
Prince Rupert, served only by CN, also is expanding to handle bulk export commodities, including propane, polyethylene, and grain and other agricultural products.
CN and Canadian Pacific historically have split the Canadian grain crop equally. But last year, CN had a 52 percent share of the Canadian grain market, Houle says, and is eyeing a 55-percent share by 2020.
Of the 20 high-throughput grain elevators on the drawing board in Canada, 15 or so will be built alongside CN lines, he says. The elevators will feature 105-car loop tracks that allow CN power to hook up, double the train, and depart for export with a monster, 210-car consist.
CN also expects to grow its automotive, frac sand, coal, and plastics and chemicals traffic, railway executives say.
“We’re pretty bullish about the next two to three years,” Houle says.
Information technology, along with other technology-related improvements, will take up more and more of CN’s capital budget in the next few years.
CN is in the midst of a four-year project to bring together various information technology systems that will provide intermodal customers with better information about their shipments, wherever they are in the supply chain.
The $250 million Enable project, as it’s called, will make it easier to do business with CN and should accelerate intermodal growth, Ruest told RailTrends 2017, a conference sponsored by analyst Anthony Hatch of ABH Consulting and the industry trade publication Progressive Railroading.
Investing in the company for growth what a new concept a total opposite concept to precision railroading and the hunter way of operation a company, CN must have woke up from the night mare of the hunter regime if only CSX would go back to that time tested ideal again and get back to running a railroad not a wall street garage sale.
A lot of folks at Csx would love to see harrison go back to Canada and help the cn sort this out.
He can take everybody he brought with him also.
No hard feelings either. Early Christmas gift.
I agree with Jim Norton – I hate graffiti and it demeans the rail industry.
But I sure don’t agree with his language. Doesn’t anybody monitor these posts.
Lengthen sidings to 10-12,000 ft is a EHH thing. If you think CN is doing better because Harrison is gone, you are sorely mistaken. He laid the operations groundwork for what CN is today. Tellier laid the corporate structure groundwork.
@Jim Norton
Gerald is spot on. Your obsession with graffiti is beyond mature reason. Put it to bed for good and grow up. Your comment is immature and only insults yourself.
A single vandal has no fear in covering four well cars in a row with graffiti.
I wonder what they think of Fred Frailey’s latest blog post.
Gerald McFarland: Blow it out your ass.
@Jim Norton
Give it a rest, nobody cares about graffiti except you…it doesn’t affect traffic volumes, it happens mostly in areas that are accessible to the public or on non-railroad private property and the shareholders don’t care, neither do most shippers(it’s not the outside of the car that’s important, it’s the inside)..
Seriously, has CN recently had to undo any damage that the EHH regime may have done to its line capacity?
Is there any chance that the IC may need some double track restored?
However, Neenah remains a pinch/choke point, a matter incorrectly addressed during the recent do-over.
Maybe they’ll see the wisdom of putting it back on the CPR.
Maybe the Canadian will run on time in another ten years or so!