Grain shippers want regulators to press railroads on service issues

Long delays for trains on rail networks are worrying for farmers and users of grain. Significant delays have been observed, including full trains sitting while customers waited for the grain onboard. Rails have been suffering trying to keep trains moving. Many of rails’ complaints seem to be related to the workforce. However, it isn’t clear that rails have actually reached the point where they can impact these delays.

The figures shown in the graph are marked. Norfolk Southern seems to be far and away the worst offender in delays at the origin of train service. But the delays still seem to be large.

Grain consumers and producers rely on train service to move the product. And rails have a responsibility to provide it. How can the two be gotten together?

Joanna Marsh Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Grain shippers want regulators to press railroads on service issues – FreightWaves

US regulator probing China’s role in container shortage

The FMC is looking into Chinese control of containers and equipment to move them. Most containers and chassis are produced in China. So says Carl Bentzel, an FMC commissioner.

China certainly has a large stake in production of both containers and chassis. There are three state-owned firms in China that dominate container production. Even with elevated prices recently, it is still about the same cost to buy a new container in China for the voyage to the US, or to recycle one from the West Coast of the US. Even if you would rather recycle an empty container, the ocean shipping firms can affect that balance by refusing to pick empties up at say Long Beach or Los Angeles, or delay their transit by long enough to cause headaches for those who need them by a certain date.

If empty containers build up in the US, tying up chassis as well, that’s a form of industrial pollution. Having to spend large sums for storage yards rather than getting them back to China is an environmental cost that should not have to be borne by US local governments and citizens.

It’s certainly worth an investigation and perhaps some action by the US government.

John Gallagher, Washington Correspondent Thursday, May 6, 2021

US regulator probing China’s role in container shortage – FreightWaves

Supply chain signals: New-container prices and production finally peak

There are some interesting statistics here about container production. The graph shows the price of new containers is dropping. Drewry estimates production this year will be somewhere around 4.5 million TEU, 70% of which is 40-foot containers. American companies are also buying 53-foot containers in China and shipping them to the US, where they are legally used on the road.

Price of new containers per TEU. Chart by Triton. Source: American Shipper.

Most containers are built in China. 80% of all new containers are built by three state-supported Chinese factories.

One of the issues no one is addressing is the buildup of ‘container waste’. So many containers are being built now because the need is in China, and it’s costly to transport the empty containers overseas. When the explosion of demand subsides, and we can see that might be starting, there will be less need for empty containers.

So where will the empty containers be? Piling up in the container yards in ports and warehouses in the US. The containers are expensive to ship back to China for reuse, particularly because of chartering costs. Adding ship capacity for empty containers is not a winner for ocean carriers when they can be built in China.

Container waste in certain locales is probably going to be a problem in places in the US where there is an excess of importing. The US does not export enough, even if we somehow increase the agricultural exports in containers, currently around 10% for some crops like soybeans. Those containers have to be stored or sold for houses or storage, or scrapped for the steel. China is ‘dumping’ steel on us again, but in the form of fabricated products— containers.

Now that land transport costs are escalating, it is starting to be costly to transfer empty containers on land in the US. That reduces the possibility of shifting them to an exporter’s location for loading.

Quite a conundrum. The container trade is bumping up against some sustainability issues other than smokestack emissions.