<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=192888919167017&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">
Friday,  November 29 , 2024

Linkedin Pinterest
Check Out Our Newsletters envelope icon
Get the latest news that you care about most in your inbox every week by signing up for our newsletters.
News / Business / Columnists

Brunell: Railroads emphasize innovation, safety

By Don Brunell
Published: February 9, 2016, 5:59am

In January, the American Association of Railroads published its first state-of-the-railroads annual report focusing on the industry’s economic value, innovations and emphasis on safety.

U.S. railroads have been around for about 180 years and maintain 180,000 miles of track. Trains move more than 51 million tons of freight daily, about 40 percent of the nation’s freight.

Rail has been a vital transportation link in the Pacific Northwest since 1883. That year, President Ulysses S. Grant drove in the final “golden spike” in western Montana, thus completing the northern transcontinental railroad.

Today, we would be hard-pressed to live without trains. Even Boeing, the world’s premiere aerospace company, transports 737 fuselages from Wichita to Renton by rail.

In 2014, the Washington Council on International Trade estimated railroads contributed an estimated $28.5 billion to our state’s economy, nearly 10 percent of our GDP. The council adds that rail transportation produces 243,000 jobs and $13.4 billion in household income.

State exports exceeded $90.5 billion, making us the nation’s largest exporter per capita. Trains transport those products to and from seaports and carry nearly a fifth of our state’s freight tonnage. Even our garbage is railed to Eastern Washington landfills.

The AAR reports railroad workers are well paid. Annual wages and benefits now total $116,830. In total, our country’s railroads have spent over $600 billion since 1980.

That is a reversal from 50 years ago, when railroads where bleeding money from excessive regulations, high labor costs, dilapidated track and equipment, and competition from truckers.

In 1970, railroads reached the tipping point. The Penn Central filed for bankruptcy, then the nation’s largest. It was losing $1 million a day, and trains slowed to 10 mph to keep railcars and engines from sliding off the poorly maintained track. Eventually, the federal government restructured Penn Central, forming Conrail, which cost taxpayers $2.8 billion.

Since 1980, railways have been rebuilding. The AAR reports key indicators of progress are train accident rates, rail worker injuries and railroad cross collisions — all of which dropped by 80 percent.

Railroads are highly innovative. They have installed sophisticated ultrasound inspection systems to locate weak rails and trackside detection systems to identify malfunctioning wheels and axles as trains pass by. Workers make repairs to avoid costly mishaps.

In the near future, railroads plan to start up revolutionary technology to analyze a host of real-time conditions, including train speed and track composition, and automatically stop a train before certain types of accidents occur.

BNSF Railway leads the industry in replacing older locomotives with less polluting, more energy-efficient models. According to the Environmental Protection Agency, of all the greenhouse emissions from transportation, freight rail accounts for only 2.3 percent.

Railroads are buying better rail cars. For example, new oil tankers have thicker steel shells, better thermal protection, stronger hatches and reinforced valves. That technology can apply to other cars shipping flammable, explosive and corrosive cargo.

Railroads invest heavily in training workers and first responders, especially those dealing with hazardous cargo. They established a Crude By Rail and Emergency Response center in Pueblo, Col., and cover the training costs.

No system is fail-safe, as we know deadly derailments such as the one in 2013 in Lac-M?gantic, Quebec, where 47 people died.

Just as we modified space shuttles and procedures after the Challenger and Columbia disasters, we have to continually improve train, trucks, ships, barges and airplanes to make them safer and more environmentally friendly.

America’s hallmark has been innovation by creative people. In the case of railroads, it is nice to see it coming from the private sector.


 

Don Brunell, retired as president of the Association of Washington Business, is a business analyst, writer, and columnist. He lives in Vancouver and can be contacted at TheBrunells@msn.com.

Loading...