How Freight Trains Connect the World - YouTube

Channel: Wendover Productions

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If you look at the list of the world鈥檚 twelve largest economies, there鈥檚 a clear split.
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Six are relatively small countries where one could never be more than a few hundred miles
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or kilometers from the ocean.
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The other six鈥擳he United States, China, India, Brazil, Canada, and Russia鈥攁re enormous
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countries with spots more than a thousand miles or sixteen-hundred kilometers from the
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ocean.
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It鈥檚 well known that ships are the main method of transport for freight globally thanks
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to their low cost.
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In fact, 90% of world trade goes by sea.
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While most of the world鈥檚 population lives relatively near the ocean, there are still
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plenty of populated areas far inland that too need a method of low-cost freight transport.
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For that, there鈥檚 freight trains.
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Unsurprisingly, those six physically largest of the twelve largest economies are, rearranged
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in order, the world鈥檚 six top users of freight rail transport.
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To understand the role of freight rail, you have to look at the numbers.
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In the US, it costs, on average, about 4 cents to move one ton of freight, the weight of
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a small car, one mile on a freight train.
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That鈥檚 about 2.5 cents per ton-kilometer.
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What that means is that, on average, you could move one ton of freight coast to coast, from
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New York to Los Angeles, on a train for about $100.
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It鈥檚 worth noting that freight rail prices in the US are among the lowest in the world.
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In most European countries, for example, they鈥檙e nearly double.
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In comparison to those four cents per mile, air freight transport in the US costs about
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121 cents per ton-mile or 75 cents per ton-kilometer but air freight is not truly a competitor
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to the railways.
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Planes will tend to carry time-sensitive or valuable goods while trains will carry lower-value
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or less time-sensitive goods.
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The true competitor to trains are trucks which carry a ton a mile at a cost of around 20
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cents or 13 cents per ton-kilometer.
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This is noticeably higher but trucks, of course, can go anywhere.
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Trains can only go where there are tracks.
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Now, the reason why trains are so cheap is because they are quite a bit more efficient
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than trucks.
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In 2017, Union Pacific railroad, as an example, moved freight a total of 471 billion ton-miles.
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That鈥檚 the total number of miles multiplied by the total number of tons moved.
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To do that, they used just over 1 billion gallons of diesel fuel meaning it took, on
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average, only one gallon of fuel to move one ton of freight 469 miles.
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That鈥檚 far more efficient than a truck.
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The reason behind this is simple鈥攖rains encounter less resistance.
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Their smooth steel wheels run over smooth steel tracks so there鈥檚 very little friction
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compared to rubber truck tires running over road.
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In addition, since the train鈥檚 just one long line, there鈥檚 much less wind resistance
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per ton than a truck.
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A single locomotive uses huge amounts of fuel but can have upwards of 6,000 horsepower and
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can therefore pull a huge number of cars.
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On average, in the US, freight trains are about 6,500 feet or 2,000 meters long.
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They can get far longer, though.
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In Canada, Canadian National regularly runs 14,000 feet or 4,300 meter long trains.
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It would take nearly an hour to walk from one end of this train to the other.
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Typically, it also only takes two people to run even these multi-mile long freight trains.
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Considering that most trucks take one person to transport one container and these trains
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can carry hundreds, it鈥檚 easy to see the advantage.
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In some cases, freight trains are even run by only one individual鈥攖he driver.
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Of course there are plenty of safety concerns with that, but railroads are increasingly
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doing so as it cuts down on cost.
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Overall, what this means is that freight trains are quite comparatively efficient both economically
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and environmentally to other means of land transport.
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Within the cab of a locomotive, there鈥檚 generally not much other than the train controls,
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a few seats, and a small lavatory.
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There are no beds or other accommodations because crews don鈥檛 stay onboard for all
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that long.
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Every driver and conductor in a company works a defined territory along the overall train
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route so for longer runs, such as BNSF鈥檚 route from Seattle to Chicago, for example,
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it takes 10 different crews to make the trip.
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The first takes the train from Seattle to Wenatchee, Washington, then switches with
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another crew that takes it to Spokane, Washington, and then this crew swap processes repeats
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itself in Whitefish, Havre, Glasgow, Minot, East Dilworth, Northtown, and North LaCrosse
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before the train arrives in Chicago.
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In most cases crews will typically live at one end of their territory, work the train
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to the other end, stay in a hotel overnight, then swap with an inbound crew to take command
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of a train headed back to where they live.
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Now, under US law, each crew is only allowed to work for up to twelve hours at a time before
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needing a rest period and so these territories where crew work are designed to be able to
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be completed in those twelve hours.
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For longer sections, though, like the 276 mile, 444 kilometer section from Glasgow to
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Minot, there鈥檚 increased risk of timing out in case of slow-down.
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If a train crew reaches twelve hours, they quite literally have to stop in their tracks
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and wait until another crew arrives.
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Typically the railroad will drive out a relief crew from the next stop, in this case, Minot,
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to take over.
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Now, there are two major types of cargo transported by rail鈥攂ulk and intermodal.
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Bulk cargo is things like grain, stone, sand, oil, and coal.
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Coal, along with most bulk cargo, is not a value-dense product鈥攁s in, it costs a little
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to get a lot.
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In the US, a ton of coal costs only $34, on average鈥攕o of course you need to put it
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on the lowest cost transport method possible which in many cases is trains.
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Trains both serve to bring coal from the mine to their domestic destinations, mostly power
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plants, and to coastal ports to be loaded on ships for international export.
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The other major type of freight, intermodal, involves the carrying of shipping containers
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to and from their destinations.
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Generally trains will carry these containers as only a step in their overall journey.
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For example, a container might be picked up from a factory in Shenzhen, China, brought
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by truck to the port of Shenzhen, loaded on a ship to Long Beach, California, moved onto
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a train to Omaha, Nebraska, before being loaded again on a truck for its final journey to
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Norfolk, Nebraska.
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Generally railroads will have their intermodal terminals, where containers are unloaded and
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loaded, spread out about 300-500 miles or 500-800 kilometers apart from each other so
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the greatest area can be reached within a day鈥檚 truck drive from one of their terminals.
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Given the lackluster nature of the US鈥檚 passenger railways, it may surprise some that
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the country鈥檚 freight railway system is considered among the world鈥檚 best.
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The country is just in that sweet spot of economically busy and spread out that supports
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the use of freight trains.
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It therefore serves as a good example to examine to explain how freight trains work worldwide.
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The US' network is quite extensive.
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As an example, Kansas, whose entire passenger rail network consists of this, has a freight
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rail network of this.
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What helps is that in most countries the government builds tracks primarily for passenger train
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usage and freight operators pay to use them.
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In the US, though, it鈥檚 the other way around鈥攊n most cases, the track is owned by freight
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operators and the government pays them to use it for passenger operations.
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Through many years of consolidation seven major freight railroads have emerged in North
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America each with their own territory鈥擴nion Pacific, BNSF, CSX, Norfolk Southern, Canadian
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National, Canadian Pacific, and Kansas City Southern.
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With the exception of Canadian National, none operates coast to coast so for longer journeys,
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a single operator could not get freight from start to finish.
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Now, take a look at this BNSF train.
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You鈥檒l notice at the end it鈥檚 hauling a CSX car and a Union Pacific car.
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That鈥檚 because, since no one railroad covers the entire continent, different ones work
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together to get freight to its final destination.
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A container traveling from Oakland, California to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, for example,
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would be first brought by truck to Lathrop, California where Union Pacific has a rail-yard.
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It would then be taken off the truck and loaded onto an east-bound train.
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After passing through the western United States and arriving in Chicago, the container would
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then be removed, hauled short-distance from the Union Pacific to the CSX terminal, and
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placed on a CSX train since Chicago is as far east as Union Pacific goes.
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That train would then take it to Kearny, New Jersey, near New York City, where it would
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then be loaded on another truck to take it to its final destination in Philadelphia.
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This is already complicated but it can get even more.
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Sometimes different railroads don鈥檛 partner or won鈥檛 allow for seamless transfers between
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certain origin-and-destination pairs.
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Chicago, for example, has dozens of different rail-yards used by different railroads so
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in order to to get a container through one might have to book a spot on one train to
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the city, then book a transfer by truck from one terminal to that of another railroad,
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then book separately the next train out of the city.
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This increases complexity enormously and it鈥檚 often difficult to find truck drivers willing
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to make the short cross-town trip especially given the current shortage of truck drivers
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in the US.
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Many of these complexities are handled by logistics companies hired by clients to manage
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the movement of their freight but these interchanges can still slow down shipping times significantly.
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There is this constant battle between the trucking and rail industry.
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Hired rail lobbyists in the US constantly work against the trucking industry by dissuading
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Congress from increasing weight and size limits of trucks.
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With a nearly global shortage of truck drivers, though, railroads are at an advantage right
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now and many are thriving.
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New railroads are constantly under construction worldwide especially in developing nations
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and the industry is growing.
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It鈥檚 not completely safe, though.
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The advent of driverless trucks will surely reduce cost and increase capacity in the trucking
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industry which could tilt favor over to the rubber tires.
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In addition, coal is one of the most commonly carried goods by freight trains and, as the
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world transitions towards renewable energy, there could be less demand for its transportation.
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Overall, though, at least until there鈥檚 a monumental shift in technology, freight
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trains will continue to be the proven method for moving freight long distances over-land.
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