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CN Rail Expansion Projects

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Posted by williamsb on Monday, April 8, 2019 2:20 PM

CN announced today April 8 Capital Spending in 4 states.

$120 M in Wisconsin, most notable 8 mi. of DT near Hawthorne.

$100 M in Tennessee.

$95 M in Louisiana, start rebuilding 2 mi long Lake Pontchartrain bridge

$190 M in Illinois.

All figures in $US.

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Posted by Adams1 on Wednesday, April 3, 2019 11:03 AM

It would be wonderful if CN would do something about the very rough single track line from Chicago south it acquired from IC. Mr. Harrison had already done his track removal by the time it became CN. Is it not sad that passenger travel on this line is slower than in the last days of steam. Of course the roadbed in general and the diamonds in particular were better maintained.

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Posted by williamsb on Saturday, March 30, 2019 12:44 PM

CN has pretty much told us where expansion is taking place in 2019.

BC

2.5 Mi. DT west of Prince George

A new siding at Port Edward

They are spending a lot of money in BC, what else are they doing?

Alberta

12 Mi. DT Leamon to Niton

5 Mi. DT near Entrance

7 Mi. DT Greenshields to Wainwright

Saskatchewan

10 Mi. DT near Atwater (from Waldron?)

10 Mi. DT Bailey to Fenwood

8 Mi. DT near Biggar (probably to the east)

& Mi. DT near Clavet

Manitoba

6.3 Mi. DT near Exira

New siding at Nourse

So now we have to get and get some pictures of them this year.

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Posted by CMStPnP on Tuesday, March 26, 2019 7:52 PM

Now I wonder if this is related to the Oil contracts that CP is angling for in the same province.

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Posted by Gotrans on Monday, March 25, 2019 3:55 PM

CN announced capital spending of 120 million Cdn$ in Manitoba on Mar 25th, 2019 as follows:

Planned expansion projects include:

Construction of a new train passing siding near Nourse, east of Winnipeg; and,

Construction of 6.3 miles of double track near Exira, west of Portage la Prairie.

Maintenance program highlights include:

Replacement of more than 35 miles of rail;

Installation of approximately 59,000 new railroad ties; Rebuilds of 13 road crossing surfaces; and,

Maintenance work on bridges, culverts, signal systems and other track infrastructure.

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Posted by kgbw49 on Friday, March 22, 2019 10:13 AM

This Investor Presentation from March 2019 has a lot of interesting information in it, including the 2019 Capital Program and much, much more.

https://www.cn.ca/-/media/Files/Investors/Presentations/CN-Investor-Presentation-en.pdf?la=en&hash=2DCF26530777F628B9260A728742A92E7430C2CE

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Posted by Gotrans on Thursday, March 21, 2019 3:18 PM

CN has announced 370 million Cdn$ in capital expenditures in Alberta as follows;

Planned expansion projects include:

Construction of about 12 miles of double track between Leaman and Nilton, west of Edmonton;

Construction of about 5 miles of double track near Entrance, east of the Alberta-British Columbia border;

Construction of about 7 miles of double track near Greenshields, east of Edmonton; and,

Building new tracks at Scotford Yard northeast of Edmonton to increase yard capacity for growing local demands.

Maintenance program highlights include:

Replacement of more than 90 miles of rail; Installation of approximately 210,000 new railroad ties;

Rebuilds of 44 road crossing surfaces; and, Maintenance work on bridges, culverts, signal systems, and other track infrastructure.

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Posted by Gotrans on Wednesday, March 20, 2019 4:59 PM

CN has announced 345 Million Cdn$ capital investment in BC Planned expansion projects that will improve traffic fluidity in the Port of Prince Rupert and Port of Vancouver areas include:

Construction of a new train passing siding in Port Edward;

Construction of 2.5 miles of double track west of Prince George;

and, Multi-year initiatives to increase capacity at the Port of Vancouver in collaboration with the Government of Canada and the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority.

Maintenance program highlights include:

Replacement of approximately 115 miles of rail;

Installation of more than 210,000 new railroad ties;

Rebuilds of 38 road crossing surfaces; and, Other maintenance work on culverts, signal systems and additional track infrastructure.

CN’s B.C. rail network serves the West Coast gateways of Vancouver and Prince Rupert and major inland terminals in Surrey, Prince George, Kamloops, and Fort Nelson.

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Posted by williamsb on Monday, March 18, 2019 9:32 PM

CN announced today (March 18) where they are adding double track in Saskatchewan.

10 miles near Atwater east of Melville, might be a continuation of what was done in 2018

10 miles near Fenwood west of Melville, must be from Bailey

8 miles near Biggar, it didn't say which side

7 miles near Clavet east of Saskatoon, probably from Dufault

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Posted by kgbw49 on Monday, February 18, 2019 12:09 PM

It would not surprise me if the double track extension south of Superior, WI starts just east of the Bluff Creek bridge near Ambridge and ends just north of the Amnicon River bridge near Rockmont.

Double track currently starts just south of the Amnicon River bridge, and the additional double track north of there would allow for one train heading south out of Pokegama Yard  to get a run for the climb up the Niagara escarpment while a northbound is able to stay in the clear north of the Amnicon River bridge while heading in for a crew change at Pokegama Yard.

Pokegama Yard is at 686 feet of elevation and Hawthorne is at 1,178 feet of elevation so it is a hefty pull.

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Posted by williamsb on Monday, February 18, 2019 9:37 AM

I have to agree with traisessive 1 about Exira to Caye on the Rivers Sub. I think I am wrong with my choice of west from Portage is wrong but that's what I put down. 

I like Dudes idea of a second bridge at Natress but can't see it happening either.

I also like Dudes idea of Galloway to Hargwen and giving a nice section of 2 tracks from Bickerdike West (or east) to Dalehurst of 33 miles.

Going by what is happening now they really need this.

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Posted by MidlandMike on Tuesday, February 12, 2019 7:49 PM

Are there plans to re-double track that section that Mr. Harrison ripped out?  It would seem the easiest to construct.

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Posted by SD70Dude on Tuesday, February 12, 2019 5:23 PM

I think you mean Galloway to Hargwen, Bickerdike West (mile 140) to Galloway (mile 150) is already double track.  Bickerdike West to Bickerdike East (mile 138) used to be double track until Hunter ripped it up.  Just west of Big Eddy there is a large steel bridge over Sundance Creek so I don't see that being double tracked anytime soon, but would be happy to be proven wrong. 

The controlled location at Wabamun (east) is both the west end of double track and the east end of the siding.  The siding is on the south side of the main and the second main track is on the north side.  From the layout it appears that CN originally intended to keep the siding and lay a second track through there as well.  There is a small yard at Wabamun which is accessed from the siding, this was formerly used to help service a bunch of customers in the area but they have almost all disappeared and the remaining one (TransAlta's Sundance Generating Station) has their own interchange yard.

Keep your eye on this thread, it will most likely have updates on double tracking well before the Trackside Guide.

Greetings from Alberta

-an Articulate Malcontent

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Posted by ADRIAN BALLAM on Tuesday, February 12, 2019 12:39 AM

Hello all,

It looks like CN has released some new data on how much is being double-tracked on certain corridors:http://trn.trains.com/news/news-wire/2019/02/01-canadian-national-details-western-canada-capacity-projects-for-2019. The articles contains an interesting map.

The Edson Subdivision is seeing an additional 18 miles added to the line. Based on the triangles, I believe the stretches will be from Bickerdike West to Hargwen which will integrate the 6540 foot siding at Medicine Lodge and will create around 33 miles of continous double-tracked (although there is still a single track segment between Bickerdike West and Bid Eddy of a measly 4.4 miles). The other section looks like it will connect Peers and Niton, which will integrate another short siding at Niton of 6400 feet. If this is the case, then only four short sidings will remain on the Edson Subdivision: Wabuman (which is close to the big 45 mile stretch of double-track unless they did connect it in 2018), Wildwood, Entwistle, and Entrance.

There is also tnother 49 miles of double-track being added between Edmonton and Winnipeg. Surprisingly again, no siding extensions appear between Winnipeg and Toronto. I am looking forward to this year's Trackside Guide to figure our where more double-track sections will be constructed and confirm what segments are now double-tracked along each corridor.

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Posted by traisessive1 on Tuesday, February 5, 2019 7:54 PM

4 and 5 are correct. 

#6: About 70% of the traffic heads into the US via Fort Frances and down through Duluth. The rest stays in Canada heading to Toronto and point east in Canada from Winnipeg. 

10000 feet and no dynamics? Today is going to be a good day ... 

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Posted by Gotrans on Tuesday, February 5, 2019 8:42 AM

ADRIAN BALLAM

Hello there,

I believe the train frequencies are as follows:

1, 2, and 3: around 40-45 daily trains. While frequencies are similar amongst those segments, tonnage is heaviest heading west from Edmonton.

4 and 5: 4-6 daily trains.

6: By Winnipeg, which route do you mean: heading east to Toronto or heading southeast to Chicago.

 

4&5: Is that 4-6 trains in total ( both directions ) or only 1 direction?  3 trains in each direction seems like a small number. 
 
6: Winnipeg to & from Toronto and all points east and south of Toronto
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Posted by ADRIAN BALLAM on Monday, February 4, 2019 7:22 PM

Hello there,

I believe the train frequencies are as follows:

1, 2, and 3: around 40-45 daily trains. While frequencies are similar amongst those segments, tonnage is heaviest heading west from Edmonton.

4 and 5: 4-6 daily trains.

6: By Winnipeg, which route do you mean: heading east to Toronto or heading southeast to Chicago.

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Posted by traisessive1 on Friday, February 1, 2019 2:30 PM

Bangor and Zeneta were indeed sidings EHH removed.

The portion on the Rivers Sub near Portage La Prairie is apparently supposed to be Exira to Caye or something around there. 

Based upon the map, Pinewood is the only short siding on the Fort Frances Sub that close to Fort Frances. I don't know what long sidings they would bother extending. 

I agree with the other things around Melville. 

10000 feet and no dynamics? Today is going to be a good day ... 

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Posted by SD70Dude on Friday, February 1, 2019 2:20 PM

williamsb

Anyone want to start a contest for bragging rights about where CN will Double Track in 2019?

Gotrans posted a report with a map under CN's Capital Program, assuming it is accurate here are my guesses. Dude might have an advantage if he takes part.

-Swan Landing east to Solomon and the Athabasca River bridge.

-Wolf Creek east to Peers (east of Edson)

-East from Wainwright AB. (Wainwright Sub)

-Unity SK east to Tako (Wainwright Sub)

-East from Dufault (current end of 11 miles of 2 tracks) Watrous Sub by Saskatoon SK (Watrous Sub)

-Bailey to Fenwood SK (Watrous Sub)

-East from current end of 2 tracks completed in 2018 near Waldron SK to

Bangor or Atwater SK (Rivers Sub)

-West from Portage la Prairie MB Rivers Sub.

No idea about the one by Duluth.

What do you think? All about 9 or 10 miles.

Within the restrictions of that map, my picks would be the smartest choices, from an operational point of view:

Galloway to Hargwen on the Edson Sub's west side.  This would connect the existing double track segments from Bickerdike West to Galloway and Hargwen to Dalehurst, use up the short 6500' siding at Medicine Lodge and eliminate the 0.4% Obed Hill as a choke point.  0.4% may not sound like much, but a heavy westbound train will climb that hill at only 10-15 mph, blocking the single track segment for nearly an hour.  Obed Summit is also the highest point on CN's mainline, despite being around 100 miles east of the continental divide.

Niton to Leaman on the Edson Sub's east side.  This would make use of the short 6400' siding at Niton, and has the added advantage of being in the middle of the bush with only one crossing along this approximately 10 mile segment (Highway 751 at Mackay, where a log truck once drove into the side of VIA No. 2).  Peers to Wolf Creek is also a good choice, but has more crossings that will limit the number of trains the RTC could stack up there. 

I would also view any segment on the Edson Sub as being steps toward double tracking as much as possible, to end up with continous double track stretches from Edmonton to Gainford, Evansburg to Wolf Creek, Yates to Big Eddy (already done except for minor upgrades in the Edson Yard), Bickerdike to Hinton, and Entrance to Jasper (except for the Athabasca River bridge and Brule tunnel).

For the two segments shown between Edmonton and Saskatoon I will pick Wainwright to Heath and Biggar to Neola.  They did the west side of Wainwright last year so it makes sense to do the other side this year, which would help with congestion around the crew change point of Wainwright, and the east side of Biggar is another 0.4% ruling grade choke point, along with Biggar being another crew change location for some trains. 

For the two segments shown between Saskatoon and Melville I will pick Dufault to Bradwell and extend the double track on the west side of Melville (Bailey or Fenwood to Goodeve, been a while since I was in that area).  Dufault to Clavet was graded decades ago but the track was put in service (just like Redsand to Blue River, BC).  Extending that double track will make use of the short 6700' siding at Bradwell and get the Clavet fertilizer plant on double track, making switching it less of an issue. 

East of Melville I will also go with Barry's choices of Waldron to Atwater (despite being a station Bangor does not have a siding, perhaps EHH removed it), and Portage La Prairie to Bloom.  It would also be great to see a second bridge at Nattress, but I don't see that happening.

I have no idea about anything east or south of Winnipeg.  Traisessive1 is from Winnipeg, and would have some better info. 

Greetings from Alberta

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Posted by kgbw49 on Thursday, January 31, 2019 10:33 PM

Hawthorne north to the Amnicon River bridge was completed as double track in 2018. The Amnicon River runs through a wide and deep “valley” where CN crosses it and the bridge is very substantial. The section of double track is a large part of the “pull” up and over the Niagara Escarpment out of the Lake Superior basin as the railroad heads southeast to Stevens Point, WI. This double track does not yet show up on Google Maps, but it is there.

Single track is in place from the Amnicon River Bridge North through Parkland, then west through Pokegama, and through Oliver and over the Oliver Bridge to the south end of Steelton Yard. There are several substantial single track bridges along the stretch from Parkland to Oliver to Steelton.

After clearing the short stretch west from the Oliver Bridge, double track commences on the south end of Steelton Yard and continues up Steelton Hill - the “pull” out of the St. Louis River valley - to just south of the I-35 bridge. There is a short stretch of single track over the I-35 bridge to Steelton Junction, which is the point where the former DM&IR and DW&P come together.  CN operates those two roadbeds as widely-separated double track north of that point.

 

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Posted by williamsb on Thursday, January 31, 2019 7:51 PM

Did Hawthorne to Parkland get done? How about Parkland to Pokegama. Are there large bridges in the way?

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Posted by kgbw49 on Thursday, January 31, 2019 7:10 PM

If they use the same strategy they did in Douglas County, WI coming south out of Superior, they will double track between major bridges and leave the major bridges as single track.

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Posted by williamsb on Thursday, January 31, 2019 6:47 PM

Anyone want to start a contest for bragging rights about where CN will Double Track in 2019?

Gotrans posted a report with a map under CN's Capital Program, assuming it is accurate here are my guesses. Dude might have an advantage if he takes part.

-Swan Landing east to Solomon and the Athabasca River bridge.

-Wolf Creek east to Peers (east of Edson)

-East from Wainwright AB. (Wainwright Sub)

-Unity SK east to Tako (Wainwright Sub)

-East from Dufault (current end of 11 miles of 2 tracks) Watrous Sub by Saskatoon SK (Watrous Sub)

-Bailey to Fenwood SK (Watrous Sub)

 

-East from current end of 2 tracks completed in 2018 near Waldron SK to

Bangor or Atwater SK (Rivers Sub)

-West from Portage la Prairie MB Rivers Sub.

No idea about the one by Duluth.

What do you think? All about 9 or 10 miles.

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Posted by Gotrans on Thursday, January 31, 2019 8:11 AM

Does anybody know the average number of daily freight trains along the following sections?

1.Jasper - Edmonton

2.Edmonton-Saskatoon

3. Saskatoon- Winnipeg

4. Edmonton - Warman via Lloydminster

5. Warman / Saskatoon - Winnipeg via Dauphin

6. Winnipeg - east

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Posted by BaltACD on Thursday, January 31, 2019 7:47 AM

blue streak 1
 
BaltACD

 Once upon a time a four mile stretch with two tracks would have been considered 'double track'.  With the size trains being operated on todays railroads - four miles is just a long siding - a nominal 20K foot siding in the world of 15K+ foot trains. 

So maybe even sidings of 5  - 6 miles would not be double track?  Guess it is a matter of each rr's definition and maybe even different for different subdivisions?  Just thinking of the line from Manchester to JAX of CSX that is just calling their 25,000 ft sidings extra long sidings?

In CSX CADS naming conventions - If each end of Double Track have different Control Point names then it is considered Double Track.  If the Control Point names are E/W or N/S the same name one of the tracks is a siding.

From a Dispatching perspective, if you can't get two or more full size trains in the clear on the track segment - in your mind it is no more than a siding, no matter what the timetable designates it.

In the day when the Philadelphia Sub and the Old Main Line were changed from double track Current of Traffic to be single track CTC it was considered that their 9000 to 10000 foot sidings would hold two trains in normal operations - that was true in 1961 when the changes were made - in today's railroading, normal 10000+ foot trains don't clear - serious delays happen when you have non-clearing trains operating in both directions. 

B&O's Chicago Division CTC installation from Sherwood, OH to Gary, IN was alternating 8 miles of single track and 8 miles of double track.  In reality its operation was as a single track piece of railroad.  There were no crossovers within the double track segments to permit the manipulation of getting 'faster' trains around 'slower' trains.  When a Local Freight was working at a location on the double track segments - that segment was then operationally single track until the Local was done and moving on again.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by blue streak 1 on Wednesday, January 30, 2019 10:13 PM

BaltACD

 Once upon a time a four mile stretch with two tracks would have been considered 'double track'.  With the size trains being operated on todays railroads - four miles is just a long siding - a nominal 20K foot siding in the world of 15K+ foot trains.

 

 
So maybe even sidings of 5  - 6 miles would not be double track?  Guess it is a matter of each rr's definition and maybe even different for different subdivisions?  Just thinking of the line from Manchester to JAX of CSX that is just calling their 25,000 ft sidings extra long sidings?
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Posted by BaltACD on Wednesday, January 30, 2019 8:02 PM

SD70Dude
Many of the double track endpoints already had sidings, whose length is included in the distance between the new station locations but would not have been included in the construction mileage.  

5 long sidings would account for that 10 or 12 mile difference.

Once upon a time a four mile stretch with two tracks would have been considered 'double track'.  With the size trains being operated on todays railroads - four miles is just a long siding - a nominal 20K foot siding in the world of 15K+ foot trains.

Never too old to have a happy childhood!

              

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Posted by SD70Dude on Wednesday, January 30, 2019 6:22 PM

Many of the double track endpoints already had sidings, whose length is included in the distance between the new station locations but would not have been included in the construction mileage.  

5 long sidings would account for that 10 or 12 mile difference.

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Posted by williamsb on Wednesday, January 30, 2019 3:20 PM

I think CN is a little loose with their figures. They said they added 50 miles of DT in 2018, according to Dudes figures and if Parkland to Hawthorne was done on the Superior Sub it adds up to about 61 or 62 miles in 2018.

CN also has stated that prior to 2018 there was only 100 miles of DT from Winnipeg to Edmonton. I add up about 165 miles plus another 80 on the Edson Sub, not counting the 12 or 13 miles EHH took out in 2 sections, there was also another 75 miles west of Jasper.

$3.9 Billion is a lot for a company the size of CN. I for one am glad they are doing it. It will be interesting to see what they actually do this year.

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Posted by Gotrans on Wednesday, January 30, 2019 10:49 AM
  • January 29, 2019
 

For CN, a strong 2018 finish

Written by William C. Vantuono, Editor-in-Chief ( RAILWAY AGE)
williamsb

Thanks for that Dude.

Trains Newswire and Sticky above have articles stating CN plans to add 105 mi. of doubletrack in 2019, 75 of it between Edmonton and Winnipeg. I hope they stick to it and don't let large shareholders keep them from doing it.

 
It looks like CN has backed off a bit from the 105 miles of double track to 80 miles as per the article from Railway Age.

CN President and CEO JJ Ruest.

CN, in reporting financial and operating results for fourth-quarter and full-year 2018, noted that the year ended on a strong note, “driven by solid top-line growth and significantly improved operating efficiency.”

Fourth-quarter 2018 compared to fourth-quarter 2017

  • Revenues of C$3.81 billion, an increase of 16%.
  • Diluted EPS of C$1.56, a decrease of 55% and adjusted diluted EPS of C$1.49, an increase of 24%. Included in diluted EPS in the fourth quarter of 2017 was a deferred income tax recovery of C$2.35 per diluted share resulting from the enactment of a lower U.S. federal corporate income tax rate.
  • Operating margin of 38.1%, an increase of 0.8 points (operating ratio of 61.9%).)
  • Adjusted operating margin of 38.8%, an increase of 1.5 points (adjusted operating ratio of 61.2%).
  • Operating income of C$1.45 billion, an increase of 19%. (2)

Full-year 2018 compared to full-year 2017

  • Revenues of C$14.3 b million, an increase of 10%.
  • Diluted EPS of C$5.87, a decrease of 19% and adjusted diluted EPS of C$5.50, an increase of 10%. Included in diluted EPS in 2017 was a deferred income tax recovery of C$2.33 per diluted share resulting from the enactment of a lower U.S. federal corporate income tax rate.
  • Operating margin of 38.4%, a decrease of 1.8 points (operating ratio of 61.6%).
  • Adjusted operating margin of 38.5%, a decrease of 1.7 points (adjusted operating ratio of 61.5%).
  • Operating income of C$5,493 million, an increase of five%. (2)
  • Adjusted return on invested capital (adjusted ROIC) of 15.7%, a decrease of 0.2 points.

“I’m very pleased with our fourth-quarter results and the strong finish to 2018,” said CN President and CEO JJ Ruest, Railway Age’s2019 Railroader of the Year. “With approximately C$1.3 billion of revenue growth in the final three quarters of the year, CN regained its position of strength and demonstrated again its ability to grow at low incremental cost. 2019 will be a year of building on this momentum. We are focused on operational productivity and services that resonate with customers.”

2019 outlook and shareholder distribution 

“With CN-specific growth opportunities, combined with a broadly positive economic backdrop, we expect high single-digit volume growth in 2019 in terms of revenue ton miles (RTMs),” said Ruest.

CN expects to deliver EPS growth in the low-double-digit range this year compared to adjusted diluted EPS of C$5.50 in 2018.

CN’s Board of Directors approved an 18% increase to CN’s 2019 quarterly cash dividend, effective for the first quarter of 2019, “demonstrating our confidence in the long-term financial health of the Company. In addition, the Company’s Board of Directors also approved a new normal course issuer bid that permits CN to purchase, for cancellation, over a 12-month period up to 22 million common shares, starting on Feb. 1, 2019, and ending no later than Jan. 31, 2020.

CAPITAL PROGRAM

CN will invest approximately a record $2.94 billion (C$3.9 billion) in its capital spending program. Of that $1.2 billion (C$1.6 billion) is targeted toward track and railway infrastructure maintenance, the same as was spent in 2018.

“In 2019, our record capital program of C$3.9 billion will be focused on investing in the renewal of a more efficient and reliable locomotive fleet, adding network capacity to accommodate our solid pipeline of growth in diverse markets and bringing technology to our Precision Scheduled Railroading,” said Ruest.

Some additional details on CN capital spending were made available to attendees at the NRC Conference in Marco Island, Fla., earlier this month.

Notable items:

  • Tie replacement will drop 10% in 2019, according to Jim McLeod, CN Chief Engineer  Structures, Design and Construction. McLeod told the NRC conference the railroad would replace 950,000 ties this year. But that on a “steady state basis, [CN is] ideally looking to replace 2.1 million ties overall annually, taking into account the higher traffic density.”
  • Main line basic track maintenance investment is expected to decline 5% in 2019 to $840 million from a year earlier.
  • The railroad plans to replace 369 track-miles of rail this year, a drop from 383 miles in 2018.
  • The railroad is investing $65 million in its strategic bridge initiative this year, well above the $45.6 million in 2018.

CN also plans to add nearly 80 miles of double-track this year, well up from 50 miles in 2018.

CN also plans to roll out fully automated track inspection this year. Phase One involves use of eight track inspection boxcars continually inspecting 4,800 miles of key core main line track. The railroad is also adding inspection portals in multiple locations. Those portals are designed to detect damage and wear on locomotives and railcars, as well as to collect data on usage.

Capital spending on Positive Train Control (PTC) projects is expected to be $226 million (C$300 million) this year, well below the $301 million (C$400 million) of 2018.

Engineering Editor Paul Conley contributed to this story.

 

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