Railroads Roar Ahead

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Railroads Roar Ahead

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A Switch on the Tracks: Railroads Roar Ahead
Global Trade, Fuel Costs Add Up To Expansion for Once-Dying Industry

By Frank Ahrens
Washington Post Staff Writer
Monday, April 21, 2008; A01


RADFORD, Va. -- When Bob Billingsley hired on with Norfolk Southern railway 31 years ago, he was a rookie on work crews that were closing unused lines as the nation's economy turned its back on the railroads.

Now he's in charge of raising the roof of a Norfolk Southern tunnel in southwestern Virginia to clear headroom for the double-stacked container cars that have become the symbol of the industry's sudden surge thanks to a confluence of powerful global factors.

"For years, we were looking for ways to cut costs to increase profits," said Billingsley, as a train rumbled by. "Now, we're building business to increase profits."

The freight railway industry is enjoying its biggest building boom in nearly a century, a turnaround as abrupt as it is ambitious. It is largely fueled by growing global trade and rising fuel costs for 18-wheelers. In 2002, the major railroads laid off 4,700 workers; in 2006, they hired more than 5,000. Profit has doubled industry-wide since 2003, and stock prices have soared. The value of the largest railroad, the Union Pacific, has tripled since 2001.

This year alone, the railroads will spend nearly $10 billion to add track, build switchyards and terminals, and open tunnels to handle the coming flood of traffic. Freight rail tonnage will rise nearly 90 percent by 2035, according to the Transportation Department.

In the 1970s, tight federal regulation, cheap truck fuel and a wide-open interstate highway system conspired to cripple the railroad industry, driving many lines into bankruptcy. The nation's 300,000 miles of rails became a web of slow-moving, poorly maintained lines, so dilapidated in spots that tracks would give way under standing trains.

The Staggers Rail Act of 1980 largely deregulated the industry, leading to a wave of consolidation. More than 40 major lines condensed into the seven that remain, running on 162,000 miles of track.

But the changing global market has fueled prosperity -- and the need to add track for the first time in 80 years. Soaring diesel prices and a driver shortage have pushed freight from 18-wheelers back onto the rails. At the same time, China's unquenchable appetite for coal and the escalating U.S. demand for Chinese goods, means more U.S. rail traffic is heading to ports in the Northwest, on its way to and from the Far East.

Coal still accounts for the most tonnage hauled by U.S. railroads, but it is the ocean-crossing shipping container -- carrying autos, toys, furniture and nearly every product a consumer will buy -- that has lit a rocket under the railroad industry. Passenger rail traffic is also increasing; 2007 was Amtrak's fifth consecutive year of increased ridership, up 6 percent from 2006.

The zeitgeist has even dropped a "green" gift in the industry's lap. A train can haul a ton of freight 423 miles on one gallon of diesel fuel, about a 3-to-1 fuel efficiency advantage over 18-wheelers, and the railroad industry is increasingly touting itself as an eco-friendly alternative. Trucking firms also use the rail lines; UPS is the railroad industry's biggest customer.

Rail traffic, revenue and profit began to soar in 2002-03 and seem largely immune to the economic downturn. Last Tuesday, for instance, CSX reported a record first-quarter profit. On Friday, the stock price of Western rail giant Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) hit an all-time high. At the industry's nadir in the 1970s, the average annual rate of return on investment for a railroad company was 1.2 percent. By 2006, that number was 10.2 percent.

And even though the economic slump has reduced key traffic about 4 percent this year compared with last, it has not slowed the railroads' urgent tracklaying. Capital expenditures this year are up, as the railroads think the downturn is temporary, said the industry's trade group, the Association of American Railroads.

Seven railways control nearly all of the freight shipped in the United States. In the West, they are, from largest to smallest by track mileage, Union Pacific, BNSF, Canadian Pacific/Soo Line and Kansas City Southern. In the East, they are Norfolk Southern, CSX and the Canadian National/Grand Trunk lines. Most of them have extensive expansions planned or underway.

The companies are attracting the attention of big-money investors, such as Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren E. Buffett, who sees a future in the Industrial Age behemoths. Buffett, a Washington Post Co. director, began loading up on shares of BNSF last year and is now its largest shareholder, with more than 18 percent of its outstanding stock.

The industry estimates it will take $148 billion in expansion to carry the amount of traffic anticipated by 2035. Of that, the railroad companies will contribute $96 billion, said the industry's trade group. The rest would have to come from the federal government and the states.

The railroads argue that more trains mean fewer trucks on the road and less air pollution, public benefits that the public should help pay for. Further, the railroads could not achieve the profits they say Wall Street demands without government subsidies. The railroads seek a tax credit, backed by Sen. Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), that would help them expand further.

Meanwhile, the railroad industry's long-standing antitrust exemption has attracted the attention of lawmakers. They seek to eliminate the exemption and closely examine the rates railroads charge to haul freight, which the industry says would cripple its expansion at a critical time.

The railroads' rate structure has also drawn the ire of some of their customers: Nearly 30 antitrust lawsuits have been filed against major railroads in recent months, including one by agri-giant Archer Daniels Midland last month, alleging collusion and price-fixing.

For some lawmakers and advocacy groups, today's rail industry recalls that of the late 1800s, when the only ceiling on rates was the limit of a rail baron's avarice. The railroads say today's rates are reasonable and reflect something the industry has not had in decades: pricing power.

"Customers had gotten used to rates going down all those years, and all of the sudden, they're not anymore," Norfolk Southern vice president James A. Hixon said in an interview. "They don't like it."

Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W.Va.), whose state depends on trains carrying coal, introduced a bill last year that the railroad industry derides as the "Reregulation Act."

The legislation, which has not been scheduled for a floor vote, would allow shippers to easily challenge railroad rates at the Surface Transportation Board, which regulates the rail industry. Now, some shippers say, they have almost no recourse if they think the railroads are gouging them.

"It's a byzantine system, and it's rigged against the shippers," said Robert Szabo, executive director of Consumers United for Rail Equity, a coalition of shippers who say that the railroads' monopoly pricing structure raises the cost of consumer goods.

The railroads "have been in a seller's market since 2004," said Szabo, whose group backs Rockefeller's legislation.

Sen. Herb Kohl (D-Wis.) introduced a bill last year that would remove the railroads' antitrust exemption. Unlike other industries, the Department of Justice cannot block a merger between rail companies, and the STB has been criticized for siding too often with the industry.

"Competition has virtually gone away," Kohl said in an interview. His bill has not been scheduled for a floor vote. "They have carved up the country, and each [railroad] controls its vast area."

Sen. Byron L. Dorgan (D-N.D.), a co-sponsor of both bills, cites an example: The railroads charge four times as much to ship a carload of grain from Bismarck, N.D., to Minneapolis as they do to ship it from Minneapolis to Chicago, although the distances are about equal. The reason: Shippers have only one choice of railroad out of Bismarck.

The railroad industry calls it "differential pricing," and "it occurs every day in the airline industry," said Edward R. Hamberger, president of the railroad trade group.

----------------

I like how the Democrats are tring to re-regulate the railroads; regulation sure kept the railroads alive in the 60s and 70s. :roll:
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Post by CaptainChewbacca »

GOOD. Now we need high-speed passenger lines. Chop chop!
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

CaptainChewbacca wrote:GOOD. Now we need high-speed passenger lines. Chop chop!
Why high speed? Isn't 90 - 125mph good enough? That lets us operate freight and passenger trains on the same lines, instead of the enormous expense of putting in dedicated high-speed runs. Just take a little time to get to your destination, y'see?

That's the way of the future, anyway.
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Post by Rogue 9 »

I'd just be happy with light rail commuter service between the towns around here, but that will never, ever happen.
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Post by Gigaliel »

How is antitrust legislation bad for rail now? The article even states that the basic subsidization of trucking (ludicrously cheap fuel costs and a government built highway system) factored into its disfavor. Not to mention it was deregulated in 1980. An then, only a mere 20 years later, is there a come back! Talk about causation. And trucking fuel costs are really high! A startling coincidence!

So, really, what's wrong with a system that makes sure that Rail isn't being anticompetitive like every other industry? I'm not seeing it.
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Post by CaptainChewbacca »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
CaptainChewbacca wrote:GOOD. Now we need high-speed passenger lines. Chop chop!
Why high speed? Isn't 90 - 125mph good enough? That lets us operate freight and passenger trains on the same lines, instead of the enormous expense of putting in dedicated high-speed runs. Just take a little time to get to your destination, y'see?

That's the way of the future, anyway.
That's how I was defining high-speed.
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Post by Darth Raptor »

Rogue 9 wrote:I'd just be happy with light rail commuter service between the towns around here, but that will never, ever happen.
Agreed. Where I live (well, sleep), I'm 100% dependent on travel by automobile. I both work and shop in the nearest town of any consequence, thirty miles distant. Towns like these won't be here in fifty years. In fact, I'd be surprised if my county's administrative seat is still here. This isn't unusual, either. Similar instances are everywhere across the central USA. It's only a matter of time before rising fuel costs obliterate the advantage wrought by cheap as free housing.

Granted, that's not an entirely bad thing. It's probably better in the long run for these towns to die than to rebuild railroads to nowhere.
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Post by MKSheppard »

Gigaliel wrote:How is antitrust legislation bad for rail now?
You're not familiar with the byzantine mess of tight regulations that choked off the railroads beginning in the 1960s and continued into the mid 70s?

They were solved by the two following acts:

- The Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976, made it easier for railroads to adjust their shipping rates, abandon lines and merge with other railroads.

-The Staggers act of 1980 gave the railroads even more freedom in pricing, and making it easier to abandon unprofitable lines along with easier mergers. It also allowed the railroads to actually own multi-modal transports; e.g. CSX owns a whole variety of non-railroad stuff like pipelines and barges.

Before these two acts; it was incredibly hard for railroads to abandon unprofitable segments of their networks; due to regulatory "need" to service them, and the railroads had to pay for all maintenance and upkeep on those unprofitable segments anyway.

Best part was, they couldn't charge the going market rate for shipping, but fixed regulatory rates; which meant that they could very well lose money on a lot of things. Which is you know, why 1/3rd of all railroads in the US were bankrupt by the seventies.
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Post by Illuminatus Primus »

That's all bullshit. The reason the railroads faltered is because the Interstate Highway System combined with the low gas taxes for those who impose the majority of the cost to the system (truckers) serves as a subsidy for trucking while the burden of infrastructure is placed firmly on the railroad companies. Our exurban expansion is only in part governed by the free market; a huge component is the irrational subsidizing by the government of land developers parasitizing on public infrastructure.
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Post by TheMuffinKing »

Looks like we are getting into a situation akin to the mid 1800's. We may see regulation of the rail lines soon.
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CaptainChewbacca wrote:That's how I was defining high-speed.
No TGV or ICE then, or Maglev? The entire point is to race the airplanes, every mph counts.
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Post by Alferd Packer »

CJvR wrote:
CaptainChewbacca wrote:That's how I was defining high-speed.
No TGV or ICE then, or Maglev? The entire point is to race the airplanes, every mph counts.
Well, such high speed trains are usually electrified, and most freight is hauled by diesel in the United States. As the article said, they're building their infrastructure to handle double-stacked container cars, which usually add up to being around 23 feet high. That would necessitate catenary wire to be strung up at least 25 feet high, or maybe more. There may not be an existing high-speed locomotive with a pantograph that can collect electricity from that height. There exist gas-turbine and diesel alternatives for high-speed rail(at least, in theory), but that kinda defeats the whole point of rail electrification.

It's a tough sell to the freight railroads, because not only do they have to build trackage with high-speed rail in mind, but electrification means that their locomotive fleet, while still usable, is now obsolete. Also, passenger railroads may be leery of operating over freight lines, because there exists the potential for conflict. As an example of this, the train I take to work runs for a couple miles on Conrail trackage. We have sat for upwards of an hour on more than one occasion, waiting to use Conrail's trackage, because they they were running a bunch of freight trains for whatever reason.
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Post by Coyote »

CJvR wrote:
CaptainChewbacca wrote:That's how I was defining high-speed.
No TGV or ICE then, or Maglev? The entire point is to race the airplanes, every mph counts.
It would also be difficult in cities, where --for safety issues-- super-high-speed rail won't be allowed to utilize its maximum potential speed. It might be usable out west, though, with miles o' nothing around.
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Post by The Duchess of Zeon »

Coyote wrote:
CJvR wrote:
CaptainChewbacca wrote:That's how I was defining high-speed.
No TGV or ICE then, or Maglev? The entire point is to race the airplanes, every mph counts.
It would also be difficult in cities, where --for safety issues-- super-high-speed rail won't be allowed to utilize its maximum potential speed. It might be usable out west, though, with miles o' nothing around.
The lines would have to be fully divided, which the NEC is.

No, the problem isn't technical, Arik, it's fiscal. Why the hell spend lots of money so people can get to their destination a few hours sooner when the issue at hand now (thanks to Peak Oil) is getting them there at all?
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Post by Coyote »

The Duchess of Zeon wrote: The lines would have to be fully divided, which the NEC is.
You mean seperate passenger and freight lines? Wow-- a doubling of rails. We're probably not going to see the financial willingness for that anytime soon...


The Duchess of Zeon wrote:No, the problem isn't technical, Arik, it's fiscal. Why the hell spend lots of money so people can get to their destination a few hours sooner when the issue at hand now (thanks to Peak Oil) is getting them there at all?
Agreed. But give it a few years, at these prices, and eventually we will well see a massive re-investment in rail expansion. Too many people are (probably) still under the impression that this is just another 1970's style "oil squeeze" and we'll get through the other side, and we'll be back to dollar-a-gallon gas someday. They don't comprehend that it's over.

The writing will be on the wall for everyone, finally, when high-speed freight trains joint owned by, say, FedEx or DHL (and plastered with their logos like their airplanes are now) are the norm on rails. When "high speed delivery" conjures images of speedy trains instead of air transport.

I'm actually quite looking forward to it.
Something about Libertarianism always bothered me. Then one day, I realized what it was:
Libertarian philosophy can be boiled down to the phrase, "Work Will Make You Free."


In Libertarianism, there is no Government, so the Bosses are free to exploit the Workers.
In Communism, there is no Government, so the Workers are free to exploit the Bosses.
So in Libertarianism, man exploits man, but in Communism, its the other way around!

If all you want to do is have some harmless, mindless fun, go H3RE INST3ADZ0RZ!!
Grrr! Fight my Brute, you pansy!
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Post by Alferd Packer »

Coyote wrote:
The Duchess of Zeon wrote: The lines would have to be fully divided, which the NEC is.
You mean seperate passenger and freight lines? Wow-- a doubling of rails. We're probably not going to see the financial willingness for that anytime soon...
Well, freight operates over sections of the NEC, but the NEC trackage is wholly owned by either Amtrak or the state within it operates, so passenger trains always get priority. Most freight providers in the northeast own significant amounts of track, anyway, so there really isn't a need to run on the NEC.
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Post by CaptainChewbacca »

Its my understanding that Maglev or TGV trains would require entirely new track, while 100-120 mph trains would be able to use existing lines with very limited modification. I'm sure Marina knows better than I.
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Post by Tribun »

Wow. The US, the most automobile-friendly nation of the world slowly realising that the railroads actually do have a use? (sarcasm) Serious, I wonder how the hell did the railway traffic break down in the first place in America? Even though we did the same excassive road-building, car-friendly-city etc. shit in Europe, you can still reach every city above 10,000 inhabitants with the rail in reasonable time.

So what the hell had happened that it came so far?

Btw., just for comparison, here some railway networks in Europe:
Germany
France
Great Britain
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Post by Coyote »

Tribun wrote:Wow. The US, the most automobile-friendly nation of the world slowly realising that the railroads actually do have a use? (sarcasm) Serious, I wonder how the hell did the railway traffic break down in the first place in America? Even though we did the same excassive road-building, car-friendly-city etc. shit in Europe, you can still reach every city above 10,000 inhabitants with the rail in reasonable time.

So what the hell had happened that it came so far?
In the 1800's, we had a series of robber-baron industrialists that used their monopoly of railroads for serious price gouging and as a powerful political tool. It was rampant corruption and abuse of power. When the US government nationalized the railroads in World War 1, they found the system so wasteful and inefficient that they were nearly useless.

Tight regulations, and subsidized competition from the highways, broke the railroads' back. With affordable cars, a whole generation grew up not knowing trains.

Reigning in corruption was one thing; but the system went too far and nearly killed railroads. But at one point, he who controlled the railroads could pretty much dictate terms to the US government, and that fear has persisted.
Something about Libertarianism always bothered me. Then one day, I realized what it was:
Libertarian philosophy can be boiled down to the phrase, "Work Will Make You Free."


In Libertarianism, there is no Government, so the Bosses are free to exploit the Workers.
In Communism, there is no Government, so the Workers are free to exploit the Bosses.
So in Libertarianism, man exploits man, but in Communism, its the other way around!

If all you want to do is have some harmless, mindless fun, go H3RE INST3ADZ0RZ!!
Grrr! Fight my Brute, you pansy!
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Post by Mayabird »

Coyote wrote: Reigning in corruption was one thing; but the system went too far and nearly killed railroads. But at one point, he who controlled the railroads could pretty much dictate terms to the US government, and that fear has persisted.
I don't know how much of that fear has really persisted in the thoughts of the average person. It's more like your average American (which is to say, an idiot) considers railroads to be some sort of primitive technology, like we were talking Star Trek technology levels and railroads are in the level below cars and airplanes. Talking about using railroads is like suggesting we use horse-buggies and typewriters.
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Post by HemlockGrey »

Serious, I wonder how the hell did the railway traffic break down in the first place in America? Even though we did the same excassive road-building, car-friendly-city etc. shit in Europe, you can still reach every city above 10,000 inhabitants with the rail in reasonable time.

So what the hell had happened that it came so far?
Leaving aside all the bullshit analysis of the American psyche, the answer to your question is that you can still reach every city via rail in, say, the Northeast, or other tightly clustered metropolitan regions.

But keep in mind that your entire country is a bit smaller than Montana. It's just so much more expensive to build comprehensive rail networks across the entire country - and, since in an era of cheap and unlimited oil, the automobile is a more attractive option than railroads for any number of reasons, its easy to see why the money was sunk into automobile.
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Post by Sea Skimmer »

CaptainChewbacca wrote:Its my understanding that Maglev or TGV trains would require entirely new track
All new track and then some, and Maglev is preposterously expensive, you really wouldn’t have a choice except to elevate the entire line. You could perhapes justify using it 30 years from now on a super busy short line between DC and Baltimore, but that’s about it.
while 100-120 mph trains would be able to use existing lines with very limited modification. I'm sure Marina knows better than I.
Reality is Amtrack has had locomotives capable of 125 and even 150mph for more then 30 years but the track and coaches simply aren’t up the job. It’s possible to rebuild existing track to get 125mph speeds, at least on some stretches, in combination with tilting trains but that can get very pricy very quickly since we’d practically have to relay every single curve to get more clearance between tracks for tilting.

The Acela trains take advantage of new rails, built to withstand higher speeds, but no work was done on curves or track though railyards which is often subject to major speed restrictions. Mainly Acela is faster simply because it has a very high power locomotives which can accelerate the train out of curves and stops very quickly, even though its top speed is usually pretty low.
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Post by Alferd Packer »

Sea Skimmer wrote:The Acela trains take advantage of new rails, built to withstand higher speeds, but no work was done on curves or track though railyards which is often subject to major speed restrictions. Mainly Acela is faster simply because it has a very high power locomotives which can accelerate the train out of curves and stops very quickly, even though its top speed is usually pretty low.
There is an additional problem with parts of the NEC having been electrified in the 1930s; this is especially true in new Jersey and Pensylvania. The catenary wire isn't tensioned, so all trains are limited to 100/125 mph, depending on the model. Were new catenary strung up, especially on the long, straight, level sections of the NEC in central NJ and north of Philadelphia, the Acelas could achieve some pretty consistently high speeds.

Not helping matters is that there are still 11 grade crossings on the NEC, all in Connecticut. Ah well, that's what you get for using existing trackage.
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Coyote
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Post by Coyote »

The French TGV used, I was told, concrete ties-- is that still the case? At first thought it seems to be a good idea, but then it seems like once a concrete tie begins to crumble, it deteriorates quickly (for train purposes, at least).
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Post by Sea Skimmer »

Coyote wrote:The French TGV used, I was told, concrete ties-- is that still the case? At first thought it seems to be a good idea, but then it seems like once a concrete tie begins to crumble, it deteriorates quickly (for train purposes, at least).
All true high speed trains, and Acela, use concrete cross ties or else track built atop a pair of concrete walls. A lot of low speed track now uses concrete ties too because they make a good long term maintenance investment. Properly manufactured they last much longer then wood and are a fair big stronger.

Thing is whole bunch of concrete ties, tens of thousands, laid by US railways over the last 10 years have proved to be defective because of poorly mixed cement and are having to be replaced very early.. This cannot be making railroads too keen on the things, even if the low quality suppliers have been identified.
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