To
say short lines had a tough 2009 is an understatement. Their carloads
dropped 25 percent vs. 2008’s total, with volume falling by double
digits in 13 of 14 commodities, according to RMI’s “RailConnect Index
of Short Line Traffic” for the 52-week period ending Jan. 2.
Based on carloads handled by 336 U.S. and Canadian regionals and short
lines, 2009 volume totaled 4.4 million units vs. 2008’s 5.8 million
units. The biggest year-over-year decline was registered by intermodal
traffic, which plummeted 47.3 percent to 326,218 units. The sole
single-digit drop: farm and food product carloads (excluding grain),
which decreased 9.6 percent to 245,629 units.
Other large year-over-year declines were tallied in “all other traffic”
(down 46.4 percent to 75,223 units), metals and products (down 44.7
percent to 288,231 units), motor vehicles and equipment (down 44.5
percent to 52,358 units), and petroleum and coke (down 36.9 percent to
180,596 units).
Meanwhile, ores traffic plummeted 28 percent to 95,722 units; lumber
and forest products traffic tumbled 27.4 percent to 178,999 units;
waste and scrap metals traffic decreased 24.7 percent to 225,353 units;
paper products traffic dipped 23 percent to 288,628 units; coal traffic
declined 21.1 percent to 599,703 units; stone, clay and aggregates
traffic fell 17.1 percent to 490,452 units; chemicals traffic decreased
12.3 percent to 735,047 units; and grain traffic dropped 10 percent to
601,088 units.