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Blizzards blamed for flat freight traffic

Written by William C. Vantuono, Editor-in-Chief

U.S. freight carload traffic for the week ending Dec. 18 was roughly breakeven measured against the comparable week in 2009, the Association of American Railroads said Thursday, thus continuing a trend of moderate gains over the prior year. U.S. intermodal traffic for the same week notched a 5.0% gain over the year-earlier period. AAR cited the effects of blizzards throughout the Midwest for the lackluster freight traffic numbers on U.S. railroads. 

aar_logo.jpgNontheless, 12 of the 19 carload commodity groups increased from the comparable week in 2009, AAR said. Commodities posting double digit gains in loadings included: farm products excluding grain, up 46.5%; metals and products, up 16.9%; lumber and wood products, up 15.6%; stone, clay, and glass products, up 14.5%; and coke, up 12%. Commodities reporting double-digit declines were non-metallic minerals, down 24.6%, motor vehicles and equipment, down 17%, and primary forest products, down 10.3%. 

Canadian freight carload traffic for the week rose 8.5% from last year, with intermodal up 4.5% from 2009. Mexican freight carload traffic slipped 0.3% from the comparable week in 2009, though intermodal rose 7.0%. 

Combined North American rail volume for the first 50 weeks of 2010 on 13 reporting U.S., Canadian, and Mexican railroads was up 9.2% from last year, with intermodal up 14.6% from 2009 levels.

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