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52-001-XIE |
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Highlights
July 2004A labour dispute and inclement weather have cut the volume of summer-time business for Canadian railways. In July, railways carried 21.8 million metric tonnes of freight, down 8.7% from June. The labour dispute by iron ore workers in Labrador and Quebec , who have been on strike since July, and inclement weather which delayed the Prairie wheat harvest had the largest impact on loadings. Traditionally, wheat provides a boost for loadings in July. Non-intermodal freight totalled 19.5 million tonnes, compared to 21.6 million tonnes in June. About 244,000 carloads were required to carry the freight. Iron ore loadings fell by more than 50% from June, and wheat, nickel, potash, cars and freight motor vehicle loadings were also down. Loadings of nickel and potash as well as cars and freight motor vehicles, traditionally decline in July as many workers take their holidays at that time. The top five commodity groupings by metric tonnes and number of rail cars, May 2004
These top five commodity groupings accounted for 40.7% of the July tonnage and 35.3% of the total carloadings. The intermodal portion, that is, containers and trailers hauled on flat cars, showed almost no change over June. Intermodal loadings totalled a little more than 2.3 million tonnes in July, and accounted for 9.7% of the total tonnage loaded. Freight arriving from the United States , either destined for or passing through Canada , totalled 2.2 million tonnes, up 2.5% over June. Traffic received from Canadian Connections, also affected by the iron ore dispute, fell 11.3% from June. Compared to July last year, non-intermodal tonnage showed a 2.0% decrease, intermodal traffic increased 3.7% and traffic received from the United States rose 11.3%. On a year-to-date basis, the cumulative total for non-intermodal loadings for the first seven months of 2004 grew 9.5% compared to the same period last year. Tonnage grew from 132.4 million tonnes in 2003 to reach 144.9 million tonnes in 2004. Intermodal loadings totalled 15.6 million tonnes, up 3.1%, while traffic received from the United States was up 3.7% over the same period, for a total of 15.7 million tonnes. |
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