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The Daily


Wednesday, November 21, 2007
September 2007 and third quarter 2007

Canadian railways recorded their strongest third quarter freight loadings in seven years despite a decrease in loadings during the last month of the quarter.

Railways loaded 23.9 million metric tonnes of freight in September, a decrease of 4.2% from the 24.9 million metric tonnes reported in August.

The intermodal portion, which consists of both containers and trailers loaded on flat cars, declined 7.7% in September to 2.4 million metric tonnes.

Although intermodal loadings decreased, September's loadings represent the highest amount for the month since 1999.

The non-intermodal portion of the freight loaded in September also decreased, declining 3.8% to 21.5 million metric tonnes.

The decrease in non-intermodal loadings was widespread, the result of declines in 48 of the 64 commodity classifications. Even with such a decline, September's loadings represent the second highest non-intermodal loadings for the month since 1999.

Rail freight traffic destined for or passing through Canada from the United States declined in September. Tonnage decreased by 3.9%, or 113,000 metric tonnes, to 2.8 million metric tonnes.

On a year-over-year basis, intermodal loadings edged up 0.5% from September 2006, while non-intermodal tonnage edged down 0.4%. Traffic received from the United States continued its strong monthly annual gain, rising 14% from September 2006.

September's traffic received from the United States represents both the strongest year-over-year increase in tonnage for the month of September and the second highest monthly traffic level ever since 1999. The growth in tonnage is attributable to a 12% year-over-year increase in the amount of carloadings originating from the United States.

On a quarterly basis, intermodal and non-intermodal loadings reached record heights in the third quarter. Intermodal loadings were the highest loadings of any quarter since 1999, with 7.4 million metric tonnes, while non-intermodal loadings were the strongest year-over-year quarterly loadings with 66 million metric tonnes.

Third quarter traffic received from the United States also reached record heights. Tonnage totalled 8.3 million metric tonnes—the highest amount of traffic of any quarter since 1999.

Available on CANSIM: table 404-0002.

Definitions, data sources and methods: survey number 2732.

The September 2007 issue of Monthly Railway Carloadings, Vol. 84, no. 9 (52-001-XWE, free), is now available from the Publications module of our website.

For more information, or to enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact the Dissemination Unit (toll-free 1-866-500-8400; fax: 613-951-0009; transportationstatistics@statcan.gc.ca), Transportation Division.