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When to double-track?

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Posted by Tulyar15 on Friday, January 25, 2008 2:05 AM
 cordon wrote:

Let's see if I can get this.  Using Michael Sol's figures from way back, on a typical 120-mile track running 35 trains/day, they average 184 moving hours and .88 x 184 = 162 siding hours.  Someone else mentioned $1000/hr for waiting in a siding.  That's $162,000/day for waiting in sidings.  Give them 300 days/year, which comes to about $48.6 million/year for each 120 miles of track - wasted crew time.

If it cost $4 million/mile for a second track, that comes to $480 million for a 120-mile added track.

Keeping it simple, I assume no siding time for double track.  Then the new track pays for itself in ten years in avoided wasted crew time.

At the higher costs, say ten times $4 million/mile, it would take 100 years to break even.

It seems to me that that would be a good investment, considering that the ROW doesn't deteriorate, once built.  I.e., the lifetime of the double track easily is 10-100 years.

This does not take into account the likelihood that the RR will get more business if it can deliver more quickly.  I.e., the new double track line may well run more than 35 trains/day.

Smile [:)]

 



One real life example of doubling I can quote from my side of the 'pond' is Chiltern Railways Project Evergreen. Chilterns Railways operates the lines from London Marylebone to Aylesbury and Banbury. The latter line was singled by British Rail in the late 1960's. But since privitization Chiltern Railways in partnership with the infrastructure owner, Network Rail, have shared the costs of re-doublindg. NR estimated the life expectancy of the new track to be 50 years so Chiltern paid half the cost. The biggest costs were not laying the second track but the signalling. On the first section to be re-doubled, Princes Risborough to Bicester, they just installed basic 2-aspect signalling with no provision for bi-directional working. But on the second section, between Bicester and Banbury they installed full bi-directional signalling which hiked up the cost. (One reason for the change was that with the nearby West Coast Main Line about to close for rebuilding, a lot of extra trains would be diverted over the Chiltern line).
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Posted by jeaton on Thursday, January 24, 2008 11:38 PM

The double track CTC ex-NYC Chicago Line between Toledo and Chicago is certainly one pushing capacity limits, and the mix of train types-Intermodal, Coal, Merchandise, Amtrak- doesn't help.  On top of that, the completion of the Norfolk-Columbus "Heartland Corridor" in a couple of years might throw added business on that line at Toledo.

My guess would be some long sidings, maybe more turnouts, and if not already in place, high speed turnouts.  A third track for the distance would be nice, but I doubt that's on the current plan.

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by joemcspadden on Thursday, January 24, 2008 10:22 PM
Ed--my guess would be that she would have included the LaPorte project
higher up in her speech under the heading, "Facilities and Terminals"
(she makes it clear that she is including intermodal there).

So--it is my view that the capital projects for the Chicago east lines
are something else entirely. Mysterious and interesting!!

Joe
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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 9:39 PM

Interesting presentation.  Ms. Butler has indicated a major investment program in the Chicago East corridor from 2008 - 2011.  Anyone know what that might be?

 

There was talk here in NW Indiana of them developing a new intermodal terminal near LaPorte.  Could that be part of the project?

 

ed

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Posted by jeaton on Thursday, January 24, 2008 5:12 PM

http://www.nscorp.com/nscportal/nscorp/Investors/Executive%20Speeches/2008/dhb012308.html

This link provides an interesting summary of Norfolk Southern's capital plan for 2008.  Of the total $1.425 billion in the plan, essentially 71% goes to replacment of depreciated assets.  The balance goes to items they consider expansion.  There is a link to the slides that provided more details to the expansion activities.

I suspect that the other class 1's plans are on the same order give or take a few hundred million.  Given the risks that have been discussed here, I am glad that I am not the one making the decisions, even if the pay is good.

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 4:16 PM

Thanks...kinda thought that would be the answer...didnt know if it would be in the $1million range or a few hundred thousand.

 

ed

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 3:00 PM

Ed:

Allowances and profitability determination:  Varies by railroad.  Allowance size varies by year.  There's no distinct pattern I can point you too.

RWM

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 2:54 PM

RWM:

Typically, how much does each division have in discretionary expendatures for a FY? (for the power switches, wye connections, etc).  Is this "allowance" tied to the performance of the division in the previous period? 

Which brings up another question.  How are divisions deemed profitable?  Back in my LTL trucking days, each terminal would have a cost structure based on fixed and variable costs and would be allocated revenue on each shipment handled.  Is that same type of accounting used for the railroad industry to measure productivity and profitability of each division and terminal?

Regarding the investment decisions being made and results not known, the heavy investment in ethanol infrastructure by the ag investor is another example of that.  Stay around for 3-5 years to see if that works out.

ed

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 2:41 PM
 MP173 wrote:

Cost estimates for the expansion are no doubt fairly easy to determine.  However, what factors are used in determining the revenue side of the equation?  I realize this side of the equation may be either savings or revenue growth.  Is the revenue growth based on broad based movements of overall freight, or is it micro applied based on specific incremental traffic patterns.  For instance, it would seem fairly straightforth to determine the ROI of inserting a 3rd main on the UP Nebraska line, you plug in the revenue per train for coal, plus the GNP growth on other commodities, and any incremental increases gleaned from growth from Asia.  Factor in the savings from dead crews, car hire, equipment utilization, etc. and you have a number.

But, what kind of factors are used when assessing a not so obvious situation such as the CSX expansion on the north-south lines?

ed

That's a very good question and, ahem, as usual I don't have an answer that's guaranteed to be satisfying.  For some capital projects there is a readily calculable cost savings at hand.  Examples include welded rail, electrocode CTC, new locomotives.  For track revisions and expansions the cost savings are very difficult to calculate and must include assumptions that if in error explode the project.  I can think of a couple of major capacity expansion projects that got about 1 year of value and have been stranded ever since.

In general, there's usually two approaches to capex at a railroad:  a small allowance for each division to spend on things they see from a local level as having high priority that are granted a low "proof" threshold to headquarters, and expensive, system-level improvements which have a very high proof threshold.  The division will consider all sorts of things in its allowance such as power-crossovers where it has hand-throws, a siding here or there, revisions to a yard throat or a new running track, a missing wye track in a quadrant to eliminate runarounds, etc.  These are improvements for which the benefit is difficult to quantify (but easy to qualify).

System-level improvements include expensive projects such as double-tracking the remaining single-track portions of a major route; tunnel-clearance projects, CTC'ing a dark line.  For these projects to receive approval, extensive and expensive study is performed including conceptual design (multiple iterations) of proposed improvements, operations modeling under different growth scenarios of each conceptual design, economic projections of traffic growth, engineering studies to determine costs, market analysis to determine ripple effects, and financial projections to determine net present value under different future economic scenarios.  The investment in study is significant -- $2-5 million might be expended to determine the conceptual design alone.  Underpinning this is a continual strategic planning effort at the railroad to identify likely trends in order to focus on probable attractive growth areas before the money starts being burned on studies.

While construction costs and operating costs have several different escalation formulas to choose from, that at least have some reasonable expectation of being correct, traffic projections are fraught with peril because basic policy decisions by governments have unpredictable implementations and enormous economic effects, as do all sorts of calamities and events.  Who was willing to bet in 1960 that ten years later the government would issue the Clean Air Act of 1970 and thereby create an immense market for previously valueless Powder River Basin coal?  Who is willing to bet their fortune today on the value of coal in 2017?  But that's exactly what a railway has to do.  Given that lead time to receive the value from significant construction is 3-5 years from the day the decision is made to commit the money, that the construction can't be relocated if it later turns out to be in the wrong place, and the ratio of the cost of construction to the value of the company, railroads investing in large projects are very much going all-in on each bet they place.

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 2:31 PM

Demarketing also occured on the IC in my hometown with limestone.  From spring thru fall, probably 100-150 cars would be shipped in for agricultural uses.  During the 70's the business shifted to trucks.  The limestone operator indicated IC basically said "no more."  It was probably a very short haul and very low rated traffic.

ed

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 2:22 PM

A real life example of expansion is starting to have some tailwinds here in NW Indiana with the South Shore looking to expand out to Lowell and Valparaiso.  It has been interesting following this in the local papers as funding options are considered.

Politicians from LaPorte and St. Joseph counties (Michigan City and South Bend) just got involved wanting to eliminate the street running in MC and decreasing transit time to the South Bend airport.  Once you begin expanding, more and more want to join in, as long as it is "OPM".

Personally, I dont see the SS expansion occuring.  With all the talk of capacity constraints, the CN certainly wouldnt be receptive to allowing commuter trains on their line would they?  Unless, of course the commuter trains would be tied into the EJE merger...hmmm.

NIRPC the local transportation agency has gone on record opposing the CN takeover of the J.  What better way to gain access to a valuable ROW than to drop the opposition?

ed

 

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Posted by jeaton on Thursday, January 24, 2008 2:01 PM

On the subject of "de-marketing", it is not necessarily a recent issue.  Around 1970, the IC was hauling hanging beef in reefer trailers in TOFC service from Iowa to Chicago.  A study indicated that it was a money loser mainly due to the clean out costs and the absence of back haul business.  A price increase wasn't an option due to truck competition.  I believe the shipper(s) was given notice that the railroad would no longer provide the trailers for the service, so the business went to the truck competition.

While there may be more cases like that, I suspect that just going to a shipper and telling him that service would no longer be provided was rare relative to other methods of getting rid of business.  Perhaps one of the most common acts of de-marketing was the abandonment of branch and secondary main lines. 

Of course, rate action was and is probably fairly common.  That would be either raising a rate, even if some business might be lost or refusing to meet a shipper request for a lower rate, even when told the reduction was necessary keep the business.  

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 1:50 PM

 

I too stand corrected. 

Cost estimates for the expansion are no doubt fairly easy to determine.  However, what factors are used in determining the revenue side of the equation?  I realize this side of the equation may be either savings or revenue growth.  Is the revenue growth based on broad based movements of overall freight, or is it micro applied based on specific incremental traffic patterns.  For instance, it would seem fairly straightforth to determine the ROI of inserting a 3rd main on the UP Nebraska line, you plug in the revenue per train for coal, plus the GNP growth on other commodities, and any incremental increases gleaned from growth from Asia.  Factor in the savings from dead crews, car hire, equipment utilization, etc. and you have a number.

But, what kind of factors are used when assessing a not so obvious situation such as the CSX expansion on the north-south lines?

 

ed

 Railway Man wrote:
 MP173 wrote:

It is pretty interesting how the whole decision making process is done on a corporate finance level.  If it would be left to the operations folks it would be different.  Of course the operations people no doubt shake their heads over the "beancounters."

ed

Not so.  At anything above the very lowest line officer, we're all bean-counters.  Railroading is a cost-driven business and career-death accrues to anyone who can't find ways to squeeze their budget and lower their unit costs.  We're all -- or we all should be -- experts in discounted cash flow; before a train is added, a siding is constructed, or a switch is powered up, better believe that the guy who wants it has run the numbers. 

RWM

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Posted by SALfan on Thursday, January 24, 2008 1:25 PM
 Railway Man wrote:

 JOdom wrote:

Sorry, Joe and Gabe, but I have to partially disagree with both of you.

Joe, I don't think a RR would run into too many objections to a double-tracking project outside the big cities and their suburbs, where the enviro-*** tend to congregate.  It's really kind of ironic - the people who "love the environment" so much tend to live in cities and suburbs where restaurants, movies, malls, cell phone towers, and so forth ad nauseum are close at hand.  If they love the environment and don't want anything built, let them go live in a cave in the backwoods of Montana.  Out in the rural areas the residents tend to be more understanding.  Of course, you will always have the "professional objectors" like the Sierra Club, Greenpeace and that ilk, but at least so far industrial development tends to win.

Gabe, I think we'd have to be a lot more desperate for the good of the general population to outweigh the howls of outrage and anguish that the trail-lovers would raise.  I live near an excellent trail (the Washington and Old Dominion, in the VA suburbs of DC), use it frequently and quite selfishly would hate to see the asphalt replaced by rails.  HOWEVER, if gas suddenly went to $5+ per gallon and there was a move to use it for some kind of railborne mass transit, I wouldn't fuss too much.  I would be in a tiny minority of trail users, who would want the trail to remain undisturbed no matter what. 

Environmental constraints on new rail construction in thinly populated areas are usually more restrictive.  I think you're mistaking enforcement of the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) with community requests for zeroing-out impacts on communities caused by railroad traffic increases and changes.  In my experience it really doesn't matter WHO lives next to the railroad track, be it rich suburbanites, poor inner-city dwellers, hardbitten ranchers, corporate farmers, All-American apple-cheeked farmers, hobby farmers, peaceniks, or whatever:  they all want their cut.  Protests against DM&E have included the rural as well as the city as well as the small town, for example.  Singling out one group "who's not one of us" makes good copy but it doesn't reflect reality out there.

RWM

Okay, I stand corrected.  Have only been peripherally involved in something somewhat similar, in a rural area.  Everybody wanted their cut, but there wasn't the mindless, diehard, reflexive opposition that one sees so often nowadays.  This was years ago; maybe that is the difference, rather than the rural area involved.

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 1:05 PM
 Victrola1 wrote:

If I may muddy the waters, when do you lay down three, or four, tracks?

The C&NW and CB&Q Chicago commuter territories were triple tracked. The Pennsylvania over the mountains and the New York Central east of Buffalo comes to mind. There have been other areas.

Does it take a large amount of schedule sensitive traffic to justify more than two tracks?

As far as I've ever been told, or read, the vast majority of 3- and 4-track in the U.S. was driven by passenger traffic.  One exception that comes to mind is the B&O West End, driven by heavy coal traffic and need to get pushers back downhill.

4-track railroading was largely an effort to separate high-speed passenger from low-speed freight.  Trains moving at different speeds have horrible effects on capacity.  Either you power-up the slow trains to move them fast, or start adding track.

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 1:00 PM

 Murphy Siding wrote:
     Is there any *disincentive* for railroads to add capacity?  As long as there is more demand than supply, prices will head upward.  At some point, adding more supply will soften the selling price of an item-freight service, in this context.  Does something like this enter into the picture?

     ( I hate to even mention this, because I don't want to derail a good (and civil) discussion:  A good analogy I can think of, is the gasoline business.  Q: Since gas is so high priced, why don't you oil companies invest big dollars in new refineries, to get the gas price back down?  A: You just answered your own question.)

Sure -- risk that the traffic will dry up.

There are many caps on pricing: materials substitution, modal substitution, and source substitution.  Price too high and you'll enter one or more of those territories.  Most of the loose-car business is priced very close to truck price, most of the bulk business is priced very close to source- or materials-substitution; and most of the intermodal business is priced very close to truck-price or a different port of entry price.  E.g., PRB coal competes in Georgia with Venezuelan and Colombian coal, and natural gas.  Containers from LA/LB compete with the ports of Norfolk and Charleston.  Lumber from the PNW competes with every trucker who can get a backhaul.

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 12:55 PM
 MP173 wrote:

It is pretty interesting how the whole decision making process is done on a corporate finance level.  If it would be left to the operations folks it would be different.  Of course the operations people no doubt shake their heads over the "beancounters."

ed

Not so.  At anything above the very lowest line officer, we're all bean-counters.  Railroading is a cost-driven business and career-death accrues to anyone who can't find ways to squeeze their budget and lower their unit costs.  We're all -- or we all should be -- experts in discounted cash flow; before a train is added, a siding is constructed, or a switch is powered up, better believe that the guy who wants it has run the numbers. 

RWM

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Posted by Victrola1 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 12:49 PM

If I may muddy the waters, when do you lay down three, or four, tracks?

The C&NW and CB&Q Chicago commuter territories were triple tracked. The Pennsylvania over the mountains and the New York Central east of Buffalo comes to mind. There have been other areas.

Does it take a large amount of schedule sensitive traffic to justify more than two tracks?

 

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Thursday, January 24, 2008 12:49 PM
     Is there any *disincentive* for railroads to add capacity?  As long as there is more demand than supply, prices will head upward.  At some point, adding more supply will soften the selling price of an item-freight service, in this context.  Does something like this enter into the picture?

     ( I hate to even mention this, because I don't want to derail a good (and civil) discussion:  A good analogy I can think of, is the gasoline business.  Q: Since gas is so high priced, why don't you oil companies invest big dollars in new refineries, to get the gas price back down?  A: You just answered your own question.)

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 12:48 PM

 CG9602 wrote:
This is all fascinating information, despite having to read and re-read some segments over and over. I encourage MichaelSol, Cordon, Don, et al., to continue posts like this. Thank you to everyone who has participated in the explanation of these issues and processes. For those of us who are studying the transportation industry in Graduate School, this has been enlightening.

I apologize for thread-jacking, but at what point would RR management consider installing automatic train stop along the route ? what issues would have to be considered ?

The answer is NEVER. 

  1. ATS and ATC are dead technologies.
  2. Once you install any signaling system the FRA, being tasked by the public with creating and maintaining a perfect, no-risk world, makes it virtually impossible to ever remove a signaling system, even if your traffic goes to zip or your passenger trains vanish, meaning you're stuck maintaining the system forever.
  3. ATC and ATS require locomotive-born equipment which means either you equip only a few of your locomotives for the ATC/ATS line and suffer a decline in locomotive utilization on your system, or you equip all of them and suffer an increase in locomotive maintenance and capital costs.
  4. ATS and ATC do not increase capacity for freight; they decrease it -- while they allow for higher train speeds, it's not economic to operate freight at the higher speeds, and while the passenger train moves faster, it is running away from following freight trains (which can't use the capacity made available) and encountering opposing freight trains more often.  Pretty soon all the opposing freight trains are in a siding.
  5. PTC and CBTC offer theoretical increases in capacity by enabling floating blocks, but after spending a considerable amount of my career in the design, adaptation, and implementation of CBTC and PTC I am comfortable saying that the actual capacity improvement that can be achieved is nil.  There is a significant safety improvement and a significant cost advantage over traditional fixed wayside signaling, however, so all is not lost.

RWM

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 12:39 PM

 JOdom wrote:

Sorry, Joe and Gabe, but I have to partially disagree with both of you.

Joe, I don't think a RR would run into too many objections to a double-tracking project outside the big cities and their suburbs, where the enviro-*** tend to congregate.  It's really kind of ironic - the people who "love the environment" so much tend to live in cities and suburbs where restaurants, movies, malls, cell phone towers, and so forth ad nauseum are close at hand.  If they love the environment and don't want anything built, let them go live in a cave in the backwoods of Montana.  Out in the rural areas the residents tend to be more understanding.  Of course, you will always have the "professional objectors" like the Sierra Club, Greenpeace and that ilk, but at least so far industrial development tends to win.

Gabe, I think we'd have to be a lot more desperate for the good of the general population to outweigh the howls of outrage and anguish that the trail-lovers would raise.  I live near an excellent trail (the Washington and Old Dominion, in the VA suburbs of DC), use it frequently and quite selfishly would hate to see the asphalt replaced by rails.  HOWEVER, if gas suddenly went to $5+ per gallon and there was a move to use it for some kind of railborne mass transit, I wouldn't fuss too much.  I would be in a tiny minority of trail users, who would want the trail to remain undisturbed no matter what. 

Environmental constraints on new rail construction in thinly populated areas are usually more restrictive.  I think you're mistaking enforcement of the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) with community requests for zeroing-out impacts on communities caused by railroad traffic increases and changes.  In my experience it really doesn't matter WHO lives next to the railroad track, be it rich suburbanites, poor inner-city dwellers, hardbitten ranchers, corporate farmers, All-American apple-cheeked farmers, hobby farmers, peaceniks, or whatever:  they all want their cut.  Protests against DM&E have included the rural as well as the city as well as the small town, for example.  Singling out one group "who's not one of us" makes good copy but it doesn't reflect reality out there.

RWM

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Posted by Railway Man on Thursday, January 24, 2008 12:32 PM
 JOdom wrote:

This is the most interesting thread in a long time.  Some of the posts I've had to read two or three times to have a dim understanding of what is being said, but that is a function of my lack of knowledge and not the fault of the poster.  Thanks everyone for all the thought-provoking information.

RWM made a comment about traffic on lines he was formerly responsible for fluctuating violently from one day to the next.  Is that generally still the case?

Does anyone know of instances where less-profitable traffic was "demarketed" to increase capacity for more-profitable traffic?  Is that being done now, due to the capacity problems in the industry?  Just curious how often it happens.

Traffic volatility -- nothing has changed.  Even if one railroad attempts to schedule, there's always the ocean ships, coal mines, terminal elevators, and connecting railroads to insert chaos into your system.  Carload shippers tend to load during the day and during weekdays, which automatically puts a daily and weekly cycle into traffic.  There is emphasis at some railroads on scheduling trains into slots and if the train arrives late for its slot, holding it at a staging yard until its slot or another suitable slot appears.  In effect the "meeting point" for the train has relocated from a siding on the line to a staging yard at an endpoint, which is not a net improvement in either that train's running time or track construction costs, but it can save on earthwork costs on subdivisions with lots of vertical terrain.  It's a fine line in cost between putting the capacity into the yard or the capacity into the main track, and there's no simple formula or "right answer".  Extensive study is used to determine the most cost-effective solution.

Demarketing is nothing really new nor unique to railroads.  It consists of determining how much capacity you have then auctioning the capacity to the highest bidders, setting the strike price at the point where the bidders will use up all of the capacity.  For example, if there's capacity for 10 trains a day, and one class of shippers will buy three slots at $0.10/ton-mile, another class will buy four slots at $0.07/ton-mile, and another class will buy three slots at $0.05/ton-mile, then the bidder asking for 1, 2 or 20 slots at $0.04/ton-mile has no slots at all.  If the cost of adding capacity is covered by the shippers adding $0.04/ton-mile then you might add it.  "Demarketing" as a term refers to the event that occurs when an existing shipper enjoying a low rate is outbid by a new shipper or an expanding shipper that bids a higher rate for the same capacity.  The existing shipper has the opportunity to match the higher rate but chooses not to do so; he is then demarketed.

RWM

 

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Posted by joemcspadden on Thursday, January 24, 2008 11:03 AM
I certainly agree that re-double-tracking a line that used to be double-
tracked is always a viable option if the ROI is there.

As for the feasibility of reversing a rails-to-trails situation, I must yield
to others. I don't know much about it.

But I still maintain that double-tracking, say, the ex-NKP main all the
way from Chicago to Buffalo or the ex-Wabash between Detroit and
Kansas City would be monstrously expensive, virtually impossible,
unless the US government decided it needed to be done, largely at
taxpayer expense. Both of these lines operate at near maximum
capacity during normal times, with lots and lots of meets and lots
of outlawed crews. So, for reasons pointed out by Michael Sol, I'm
sure these lines are functioning at far-from-peak profitability. But
I don't think much can be done about it.
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Posted by SALfan on Thursday, January 24, 2008 10:45 AM
 gabe wrote:

 joemcspadden wrote:
At least east of the Mississippi, double-tracking a line that has always been
single-track is seldom an option. Too many environmental impact studies;
too many NIMBYs ready to pounce; too many buildings too close to the
tracks in towns & cities; too many natural bottlenecks; etc., etc.

The only exception would be if the government rally wanted it to happen
and was prepared to cough up huge subsidies. Even then, most likely the
only reason state or federal government interest might be there would be
for passenger trains--and this would make things even worse.

To a very large extent, railroad tracks are a truly finite resource. And with
an awful lot of shipping business needing to use this limited resource, I
don't see that railroad managements will have much choice--they will
simply have to be concerned about profits, rather than profitability (to
relate back to the distinction Michael Sol drew in this context).

If you have a mill that is most profitable at 50% capacity, and future
projections show available business for 100% capacity or more, you
have a choice--just build another mill. 99% of the time,
building another railroad track isn't an option. It ain't gonna happen.

Joe

I am not completely disagreeing with you.  But, I think the fact that we still build much wider highways would seem to indicate that rail expansion may not be all that finite.  Moreover, several lines were once double tracked, permitting a good deal of expansion there.  Finally, when we really hit a transportation crunch, I suspect that rails-to-trails might not be the untouchable beast we all think they are.

Sorry, Joe and Gabe, but I have to partially disagree with both of you.

Joe, I don't think a RR would run into too many objections to a double-tracking project outside the big cities and their suburbs, where the enviro-*** tend to congregate.  It's really kind of ironic - the people who "love the environment" so much tend to live in cities and suburbs where restaurants, movies, malls, cell phone towers, and so forth ad nauseum are close at hand.  If they love the environment and don't want anything built, let them go live in a cave in the backwoods of Montana.  Out in the rural areas the residents tend to be more understanding.  Of course, you will always have the "professional objectors" like the Sierra Club, Greenpeace and that ilk, but at least so far industrial development tends to win.

Gabe, I think we'd have to be a lot more desperate for the good of the general population to outweigh the howls of outrage and anguish that the trail-lovers would raise.  I live near an excellent trail (the Washington and Old Dominion, in the VA suburbs of DC), use it frequently and quite selfishly would hate to see the asphalt replaced by rails.  HOWEVER, if gas suddenly went to $5+ per gallon and there was a move to use it for some kind of railborne mass transit, I wouldn't fuss too much.  I would be in a tiny minority of trail users, who would want the trail to remain undisturbed no matter what. 

  • Member since
    March 2004
  • From: Indianapolis, Indiana
  • 2,434 posts
Posted by gabe on Thursday, January 24, 2008 9:43 AM

 joemcspadden wrote:
At least east of the Mississippi, double-tracking a line that has always been
single-track is seldom an option. Too many environmental impact studies;
too many NIMBYs ready to pounce; too many buildings too close to the
tracks in towns & cities; too many natural bottlenecks; etc., etc.

The only exception would be if the government rally wanted it to happen
and was prepared to cough up huge subsidies. Even then, most likely the
only reason state or federal government interest might be there would be
for passenger trains--and this would make things even worse.

To a very large extent, railroad tracks are a truly finite resource. And with
an awful lot of shipping business needing to use this limited resource, I
don't see that railroad managements will have much choice--they will
simply have to be concerned about profits, rather than profitability (to
relate back to the distinction Michael Sol drew in this context).

If you have a mill that is most profitable at 50% capacity, and future
projections show available business for 100% capacity or more, you
have a choice--just build another mill. 99% of the time,
building another railroad track isn't an option. It ain't gonna happen.

Joe

I am not completely disagreeing with you.  But, I think the fact that we still build much wider highways would seem to indicate that rail expansion may not be all that finite.  Moreover, several lines were once double tracked, permitting a good deal of expansion there.  Finally, when we really hit a transportation crunch, I suspect that rails-to-trails might not be the untouchable beast we all think they are.

  • Member since
    September 2002
  • From: US
  • 383 posts
Posted by CG9602 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 8:32 AM
This is all fascinating information, despite having to read and re-read some segments over and over. I encourage MichaelSol, Cordon, Don, et al., to continue posts like this. Thank you to everyone who has participated in the explanation of these issues and processes. For those of us who are studying the transportation industry in Graduate School, this has been enlightening.

I apologize for thread-jacking, but at what point would RR management consider installing automatic train stop along the route ? what issues would have to be considered ?
  • Member since
    May 2004
  • From: Valparaiso, In
  • 5,921 posts
Posted by MP173 on Thursday, January 24, 2008 8:25 AM

cordon and Don:

Excellent points.  Cordon, as Don stated, the 10 year payback period is generally not quick enough.  Most ROI analysis require a pretty big hurdle rate before the money is invested, usually 15% - 20%, if memory serves me correct.  Quite often the process is as follows:

1.  All capex possibilities are considered with an anticipated ROI developed for each project.

2.  Those with the highest ROI are chosen, if those are above the "hurdle rate" which is based on a company's "cost of capital".  So, if a railroad has 50 capex projects to consider and a budget of $1 billion per year, those which have the highest ROI and fit within the budget get approval.

I dont know what the ROI would be on the project you just described, but in agreement with Don, I think it would be quite low.

Rob Krebs got into hot water with his expansion of the Transcon line.  If you recall, about 10 years ago he authorized the double tracking of the Kansas City - Clovis section.  I believe the phrase "if you build it, they will come" term was used.  Well, it took awhile and the traffic did come, but BNSF got taken to the woodshed by Wall Street for the capex.

Visionary or excessive investment?  Time has shown that Krebs gamble paid off, but it took awhile.  If the traffic hadnt showed up, it would have been an expensive expansion that didnt pay off.  These are tough decisions.  If you wait for the anticipated traffic to show up, you might not get it, if your infrastructure isnt able to handle it.  If you build anticipating the business and things change (think of all the ethanol investment the past couple of years) then that is wasted capital that SHOULD have been invested in other projects.

It is pretty interesting how the whole decision making process is done on a corporate finance level.  If it would be left to the operations folks it would be different.  Of course the operations people no doubt shake their heads over the "beancounters."

ed

  • Member since
    July 2007
  • 105 posts
Posted by joemcspadden on Thursday, January 24, 2008 8:22 AM
At least east of the Mississippi, double-tracking a line that has always been
single-track is seldom an option. Too many environmental impact studies;
too many NIMBYs ready to pounce; too many buildings too close to the
tracks in towns & cities; too many natural bottlenecks; etc., etc.

The only exception would be if the government rally wanted it to happen
and was prepared to cough up huge subsidies. Even then, most likely the
only reason state or federal government interest might be there would be
for passenger trains--and this would make things even worse.

To a very large extent, railroad tracks are a truly finite resource. And with
an awful lot of shipping business needing to use this limited resource, I
don't see that railroad managements will have much choice--they will
simply have to be concerned about profits, rather than profitability (to
relate back to the distinction Michael Sol drew in this context).

If you have a mill that is most profitable at 50% capacity, and future
projections show available business for 100% capacity or more, you
have a choice--just build another mill. 99% of the time,
building another railroad track isn't an option. It ain't gonna happen.

Joe
  • Member since
    October 2004
  • From: U K
  • 146 posts
Posted by mhurley87f on Thursday, January 24, 2008 7:39 AM

I have to agree that this topic has been most interesting, and thanks to all the contributors.

The question that perhaps also needs to be addressed is "When to single track?"

Back in the UK, the chickens are certainly coming home to roost in the context of hurried decisions taken at the time immediately following Beeching, and also in the Peter Parker era.  I suspect each of us UK members might quote a local example, and worryingly, further line singling and closure of diversionary routes of long standing are even now allegedly under consideration.

Hwyl,

Martin

 

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