Statistics Canada
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Monthly Railway Carloadings

August 2007

52-001-X


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Highlights

  1. Canadian railways continued to benefit from a strong summer season as total freight grew for the third consecutive month in August.
  2. Railways carried 24.9 million metric tonnes of freight, an increase of 1.4% from the 24.6 million metric tonnes reported in July.
  3. The intermodal portion, consisting of containers and trailers loaded on flat cars, climbed 4% in August to 2.6 million metric tonnes.
  4. The increase in intermodal loadings marks the second consecutive monthly increase and the fourth consecutive year in which loadings have increased for the month of August. The increase also marks the highest loadings for any month in 2007.
  5. The non-intermodal portion of freight loaded increased for the third consecutive month, rising 1.1% to 22.4 million metric tonnes.
  6. The increase in non-intermodal loadings was the result of gains in tonnage in 40 of the 64 commodity classifications.
  7. Among the largest loadings were fresh, chilled or dried vegetables, which nearly quadrupled, other cereal grains, which more than doubled and animal feed and products, which rose 24.7%.
  8. Loadings of coal, wheat and iron ores and concentrates declined in August following gains in July. However, each saw year-over-year double digit gains – coal (+22.2%), wheat (+19.1%) and iron ores and concentrates (+10.1%).
  9. Freight haulage either destined for or passing through Canada from the United States, rose sharply in August. Tonnage rose by 10.6%, or 277,000 metric tonnes, to 2.9 million metric tonnes.
  10. On a year-over-year-basis, intermodal loadings climbed 6.1% from August 2006, while non-intermodal tonnage edged down 0.3%. Total traffic received from the United States continued to grow, rising 18.2% from August 2006.
  11. August’s increase in traffic from the United States represents the strongest year-over-year monthly increase since 1999.