U.S. Freight Railroad Infrastructure: Current and Future Issues Craig F. Rockey Vice President - Policy and Economics Association of American Railroads Washington DC March 17, 2004
The U.S. Rail Network
U.S. Freight Intercity Modal Market Share: 2001 “Other” for ton-miles is less than 0.5%. Source: Eno Transportation Foundation RRs 42% Trucks 28% Water 13% Pipeline 17% Trucks 80% RRs 10% Ton-Miles Revenue Water 1% Other 7% Pipeline 2%
Freight Rail Provides Major Public Benefits Fuel efficient Less pollution Reduced congestion Safer Railroad Fuel Efficiency (Ton-Miles Per Gallon of Fuel Consumed)
Fuel efficient Less pollution Reduced congestion Safer The EPA estimates that for every ton-mile, trucks emit roughly three times more nitrogen oxides and particulates than locomotives. Other studies suggest trucks emit 6 to 12 times more. Freight Rail Provides Major Public Benefits, cont.
Fuel efficient Less pollution Reduced congestion Safer Costs of U.S. Highway Congestion (Billions of Constant 2001 Dollars) Source: Texas Transportation Institute Freight Rail Provides Major Public Benefits, cont.
Fuel efficient Less pollution Reduced congestion Safer Freight Rail Provides Major Public Benefits, cont. Truck vs. Railroad Hazmat Incidents Source: AAR analysis of data from FHWA, FRA, RSPA, and STB.
Today’s Freight Rail Environment Vast majority privately-owned. Essentially no government funding. Separate freight & passenger operations. Access privately negotiated, voluntary. Generally owner and operator.
Economic Fundamentals of Freight Railroading Railroads are networks with virtually unlimited origin-destination pairs — what happens in one place affects many others. High fixed and sunk costs — infrastructure can’t easily be picked up and moved. Substantial economies of scale and scope. Huge differences in customer demands and options.
Freight Rail Traffic Density (Millions of Class I Ton-Miles Per Mile of Road Owned) Source: AAR
RRs Have Far Higher Capital Expenditures Than Other Industries
Source: AAR Class I RR Spending on Roadway and Structures ($ Billions)
Transport Demand: U.S. DOT says freight traffic will increase nearly 70% by 2020; international higher. Service Quality: Reliability, speed, frequency Price Highway Congestion: Pressure to reduce congestion, emissions, fuel use, and enhance safety. Passenger: Demands for freight-owned track. Drivers of Railroad Demand
But Because Railroads Do Not Earn Their Cost of Capital… Source: Surface Transportation Board Cost of Capital Return on Investment Class I Cost of Capital vs. Return on Investment
…They Cannot Make All Desired Investments
Best used for projects whose main purpose is to meet public needs. RRs pay for their benefits and public pays for public benefits. Not “subsidy” to RRs Public-Private Partnerships Can Help “Relatively small public investments in the nation’s freight railroads can be leveraged into relatively large benefits for the nation’s highway infrastructure, highway users, and freight shippers.” --AASHTO
Railroads Providing Better Service Alliances with other RRs, other modes, customers, suppliers, others Technological applications Innovations in locomotive operations, staffing, asset utilization, scheduling Better equipment and infrastructure New offerings
Other Challenges Facing RRs Reregulation Environmental Truck Size and Weights Economic Growth Fuel Tax Safety Passenger Rail P Security Staffing TEA-21 New Technology 3
Daunting growth forecast. Infrastructure is preeminent issue. Don’t restrict rail earnings through reregulation Tap public/private partnerships. Continued focus on meeting customer needs Summary