Why U.S. Freight Trains Are So Much Better Than Passenger Rail - YouTube

Channel: CNBC

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The United States lags behind the rest of the world when it comes to passenger trains, but when it comes to the freight railroad, the U.S.
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is dominating. The freight rail network in the U.S.
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operates over 140,000 miles of privately owned track in every state except for Hawaii.
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It moves one-third of all U.S.
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exports and roughly 40 percent of long distance freight volume.
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The North American freight rail network is considered the most efficient, the largest and the most profitable freight rail
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network in the world.
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It competes directly with the trucking industry to move goods around the country, shipping everything from coal to cars to chemicals.
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And with the rise of e-commerce companies like Amazon, trains are increasingly moving consumer goods as well.
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If you see it on a shelf, we likely had a hand in moving it.
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There are seven major freight railroads that connect North America.
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Union Pacific and BNSF dominate the West.
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CSX and Norfolk Southern are the primary East Coast operators, while Kansas City Southern, along with Canadian Pacific and Canadian National run
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routes north and south.
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Amtrak, which is the United States passenger service, owns only three percent of the country's rail.
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In 2019, the top five railroads in the U.S.
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had a total operating revenue of over $71 billion.
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BNSF, a subsidiary of Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, is not publicly traded, but the remaining four U.S.
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companies have seen their stock on a steady climb over the last several years.
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The railroads are incredibly profitable and actually are achieving profits that they've never seen in their entire history.
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That, unfortunately, is not true for passenger railroad.
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Amtrak continues to lose money.
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It's the only major for profit railroad in the United States that hauls passengers, and yet it has never made a profit.
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The future of freight demand in this country is strong.
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Estimates of 30 to 40 percent increases in freight demand between now and the next few decades are prevalent.
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But the freight rail industry success has not come without its challenges.
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The industry has dealt with bankruptcies, the lack of demand for coal and the more recent supply chain bottlenecks and rise in thefts.
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The seven top railroads, which owned the majority of the tracks in North America, have also been criticized for monopolistic power over the rail
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industry.
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They tend to be very oligopoly and have an enormous amount of power and pricing, and there isn't a lot of competition.
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CNBC explores how freight railroads became so profitable and how the industry plans to evolve to stay on top.
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The U.S. railroad dates back to the year 1830 before airplanes or automobiles were even invented.
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Passenger rail and freight were in high demand to move people and things around the expanding country.
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It's been an economic backbone of the United States in many ways, plays a core and central theme in American history and particularly the
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state of the economy.
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The railroad has seen many high and low points.
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By 1917, 1,900 railroads operated on 254,000 miles of track.
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The forties and fifties brought the rise of cars, air travel and trucking.
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Up until that point, there was basically no competition for passenger or freight rail.
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Besides, other railroad companies and the industry was subject to federal regulation that set rates and profit levels.
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After World War Two, the federal government built this incredible interstate highway network and really lit trucking on fire, but didn't
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relax the regulatory standards on the rail industry, even though the competition increased dramatically.
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It wasn't until 1980 when the Staggers Act was enacted that these regulations were loosened.
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It allowed railroads to choose routes, prices and services and brought profits back to the railroads.
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Since then, many redundant routes and railroad mergers have consolidated the industry.
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There is a series of about five or six different mergers that allow the Union Pacific to be the 32,000 miles of mainline track that we see here
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today. Without M&A, chances are that rail as a percent of overall freight would be a much less important part
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of our domestic freight network.
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Kansas City Southern just recently agreed to merge with Canadian Pacific, and if the Surface Transportation Board approves, it will create the only
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railroad linking Canada, the U.S.
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and Mexico. Today, the U.S.
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has some of the most profitable freight railroad businesses in the world, achieving billions in profits.
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Passenger rail, however, has not seen a similar comeback.
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While freight railroads have invested at least $25 billion dollars a year year over year into their networks over the past several decades, passenger
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rail has not had the same level of benefit when it comes to Amtrak.
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The federal government has traditionally been the primary funder of Amtrak, and the amount of funding pales in comparison to funding levels
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that have occurred in other countries.
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Experts say geography and privatization of the rail freight industry is why some consider it to be the most efficient in the world.
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The rest of the world does things quite a bit differently.
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In most of the rest of the world, the rail network is nationalized.
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It isn't owned by a particular company.
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United States geography is the primary reason that freight, railroad and the freight network in the United States is far superior to what you see
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in other countries. A lot of what railroads depend upon are bulk commodities, agriculture, commodities and mining that we get out of the
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ground, and a lot of those materials come from the center part of the country.
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And because these are going to non populated areas.
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Rail is really well positioned and is a far superior mode of traffic than you see with trucks.
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These companies compete with each other, but also must work together and coordinate shipments since there's not one central owner of the railroad.
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In order for us to provide service for a customer, say from the West Coast all the way to the East Coast, we have to hand off those products.
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Those boxes, those car loads to a different carrier on the east side of the network.
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Freight railroads are what I like to call the middle miles.
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And so when you're looking at international traffic, for example, on the West Coast, you have ships bringing in goods and those are translated
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either directly into train or into truck.
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Train takes the long miles, the middle miles of those trips and then hands those off to truck, often at the end of the trip.
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So we all work together is one overall network.
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Through the reduction of companies and consolidation, railroad market power has increased.
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It are occasionally brought up in front of the regulators for not servicing, but also not charging fair market rates.
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They're constantly under the lens and constantly accused of exercising more monopolistic practices in their
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pricing. Not so much on the intermodal traffic, which has to sort of stay naturally competitive with truck traffic, but more so on the bulk
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goods that there isn't really an equivalent truck competition.
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The Biden administration issued an executive order last July that calls for regulation on the freight industry, targeting a practice known as
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reciprocal switching.
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Reciprocal switching is intended to foster more competitive environments for shippers because the freight companies own certain stretches of track.
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The regulation would force them to open up the tracks to other freight companies, giving shippers more options of who to work with and therefore
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creating a more competitive market.
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The practice is already common in Canada, and some freight railroads have switching agreements, which came as a result of previous mergers.
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When Amtrak was created, part of the deal was its passenger trains would still have access to tracks owned by the freight companies.
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Amtrak pays host railroads $142 million a year to use their tracks.
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It comes at a time when we're trying to move as much freight as we can throughout the supply chain, and to do anything that would knowingly
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undermine the fluidity of the freight network is frankly wrongheaded and at odds with the overarching goal of maximizing freight movement.
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The system works.
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The Surface Transportation Board is in place to adjudicate rate disputes and
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determine whether or not a particular rate might be reasonable or not.
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The Surface Transportation Board, the agency who oversees economic regulation in the industry, is holding a public hearing to discuss the
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matter in March. The railroad companies rely on the trucking industry, but also compete with them for customers.
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Truck is the biggest form of competition for railroads in North America.
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Trucks have an advantage on the smaller shipments that are associated more commonly with consumer products rails.
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We have a big advantage on what I would call bulk commodities that are heavy and move in larger quantities.
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Historically, a big portion of rail volumes came from moving coal throughout the country.
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In 2019, coal shipments were down 45 percent from their peak in 2006.
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Today, the rise of e-commerce and companies like Amazon have made intermodal containers its biggest shipment.
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Intermodal containers can move seamlessly from a ship to a train to a truck without having to be unpacked.
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We've become a more intermodal intensive industry, and so things that we hadn't done in the past as much as move smaller packages.
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We're doing a lot more of that.
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It gives you more breadth and more reach in terms of the customers that you can serve.
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The freight rail is the most environmentally friendly way to move goods over land.
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We emit about twenty five percent of carbon emissions that are trucking partners do.
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One intermodal freight train carries upwards of two hundred containers, and so that's two hundred trucks worth of goods on one train.
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And for the railroads themselves, it's far more profitable.
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They can charge a much higher rate on a per mile basis by hauling intermodal traffic than just hauling general
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commodities.
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Los Angeles and Chicago are the two top areas in the U.S.
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for intermodal trains.
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Theft of these boxes have been on the rise recently in L.A., Union Pacific containers carrying packages for companies like UPS, FedEx and Amazon were
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found open and a trail of empty boxes lined the tracks.
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A handful of years ago, theft out of an intermodal box was a nuisance.
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Happened every once in a while wasn't organized.
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Today, over the course of about the last year and a half, that theft has become very well organized.
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We have a concentrated issue in the L.A.
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basin.
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Los Angeles ports are a crucial part of the global supply chain.
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The Port of L.A. and the Port of Long Beach together taken 40 percent of all goods sent to the U.S.
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by water. Millions of containers and billions of dollars worth of goods move through the port every year.
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Supply chain issues during the pandemic have led to a backup at the ports, with lots of containers waiting to move into the country
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When the supply chain is facing challenges.
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Freight railroads are facing challenges, and we've been working hard to do our part to help alleviate supply chain challenges facing this country, and
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that's through operating twenty four seven.
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It's through working with our maritime and our trucking partners to keep goods moving, to stand up additional capacity and really try to keep the
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economy going.
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As the industry looks to the future automation and the rise of self-driving truck companies like Embark and Plus could take more of the freight
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industry's market share,
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If you think about on a per mile basis, there are estimates that an autonomous truck would actually reduce the cost of running a truck by as
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much as 70 percent.
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If that plays out, that's going to put significant pressure on the railroads because they simply cannot maintain high pricing and really
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participate in that intermodal traffic.
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We see an awful lot of emphasis on autonomous trucks, and I'm pretty sure within our lifetime we'll see driverless trucks on the road.
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But we also then need to be able to automate the railroads to keep up with that.
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Union Pacific has invested in TuSimple, a self-driving truck startup as a way to keep up with developments.
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It also said at the company's investor day in 2021 that ultimately our answer to autonomous trucks is autonomous trains.
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There are companies like parallel systems currently working on prototypes of self-driving trains.
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Of course, we're looking to be as competitive as we can and in the future.
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There's a lot of pieces that go into that, but certainly the technology and kind of the backbone of that technology we think we think exists and
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we're pursuing those opportunities.
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Despite being the dominant mover of freight in the U.S., the trucking industry is facing a labor shortage, an issue that only grew worse during
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the pandemic.
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Labor, as a percent of overall railroads, is far less than what you see with the trucking industry.
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So autonomous is going to benefit the trucking industry far greater than it would benefit the railroad industry, and so it's a major threat to the
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railroads. I would fully expect that the railroads will fight through their lobbying efforts to keep autonomous trucks really
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boxed in and tightly regulated, and will be a big constituent that pushes back on full autonomous.
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Trucking makes up 27 percent of jobs in the transportation industry compared to rail transportation, which makes up three percent.
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The rail industry declined by 40,000 jobs from November 2018 to December 2020.
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Railroads also have their own set of issues as it relates to labor.
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The unions that are fighting them on things like precision railroading, which makes the railroads far more efficient and makes the railroads far
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more dependable, but also mean that there's less labor and humans involved in the transportation network's.
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Precision
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scheduled railroading is an operational innovation that helped turn the industry around.
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It adds, and mixes freight cars onto longer trains for fewer trips and reduces the number of stops and crew.
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Unions have not particularly liked it, but shareholders of the railroads have loved it, and that's really driven the capital appreciation, the
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proper appreciation and the efficiency of the railroads for the past couple of decades.
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There's pressure to protect jobs.
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The regulators have to be very, very careful that we don't end up back in the 1970s in 10 or 20 more years when the trucking
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industry has evolved, being highly innovative and automated, and rails are back holding the two man crews because the federal
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government has said you will have a two man crew rule.
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Despite these criticisms and the number of employees in both trucking and freight rail declining, the need to transport goods around the world will
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not stop. The projected growth for freight volume in the U.S.
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is expected to grow 50 percent by 2050.
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And it's important that people realize that we're out there working out on the network outside twenty four seven.
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We've done that throughout the pandemic.
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We've done that throughout the supply chain challenges we've seen, and we'll continue to do that into the future.