Container shipping rates up for rail, down for trucking, says Stats Canada
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Statistics Canada released a report indicating that container shipping rates have has increased over the past year by rail, but have decreased on the trucking side.
The Freight Rail Services Price Index estimates price changes for the mainline freight rail industry in Canada. In July 2024, the price to move intermodal containers by rail increased 2.5 per cent compared with July 2023.
Similarly, the For-hire Motor Carrier Freight Services Price Index tracks price movements for truck transport. Prices charged by the general freight trucking industry group, which transports a variety of commodities generally palletized and carried in a van trailer, box or container (including intermodal containers), decreased by 3.7 per cent from March 2023 to March 2024.
Stats Canada goes on to say that in 2022, 36.5 million tonnes of freight was moved in Canada by intermodal containers on rail flat cars, up slightly from 2021 (36.4 million). The 39.4 million tonnes moved in 2017 was the highest volume on record since Stats Canada started tracking the data in 2001 (23.1 million).
Although the overall number of freight cars owned by Canadian mainline companies decreased from 114,334 in 1986 to 54,936 in 2022, the proportion of flat cars increased from about one in five (19.5 per cent) to over one in three (35.7 per cent) over the same period. The 19,633 flat cars on the rails in Canada in 2022 was the largest number recorded since 2006 (20,915).
In May 2024, intermodal shipments (mainly containers) originating in Canada totalled 3.1 million tonnes. This was down from 3.2 million tonnes in April, which was the highest level since August 2022.
Stats Canada last looked at price movements of various shipping modes in August 2022, when the economy was facing headwinds of supply chain bottlenecks and high inflation, leading to significant increases in transportation costs.
Earlier in 2022, the price of shipping containers had become more expensive, and what used to be a journey of 40-to-50 days in 2019 for a container to get from Asia to North America could have taken up to 110 days in 2022.
Recently released findings from the Survey of Innovation and Business Strategy found that shipping costs, the COVID-19 pandemic and transportation infrastructure barriers were the top three barriers to exporting that were reported as either difficult or very difficult by Canadian exporting businesses in 2022.
While the cost of shipping by container has since plateaued, recent geopolitical conflict in the Middle East has diverted ocean vessels from using the Suez Canal, while weather-related events have reduced the capacity of the Panama Canal. Both situations can result in longer journeys and higher freight rates.
In December 2023, the average port dwell time for containers was 3.7 days for East Coast ports, up from the previous month (2.2 days) but down from the recent peak of 12.4 days in July 2022.
For West Coast ports, the average dwell time was 4.1 days in December 2023, up from 3.7 days in November 2023. July 2022 and January 2022 each had an average dwell time of 7.3 days.
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