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Opinion: Rail interswitch plan needs investment

A divisive issue in Canadian Railways.
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A coalition of grain and oilseed organizations is campaigning to set the interswitching zone at 500 km for five years.

Neither the railways nor grain shippers are happy with the federal proposal to temporarily expand the availability of regulated interswitching between Canada’s two national railways — but for different reasons.

The Railway Association of Canada says extending the statutory zone in which a carrier must pick up a shipper’s cars and deliver them to a competing carrier, to 160 kilometres from 30, will increase costs and inefficiencies by slowing grain movement by as much as 25 per cent.

It says the added layer of regulation will damage Canada’s competitiveness, disrupt supply chains, add to inflation and increase greenhouse gas emissions.

It also says the expansion would give U.S. railways an unfair incentive to poach traffic from Canadian carriers. However, it’s hard to see how that would be much of a threat given that the railways also claim to have the lowest shipping rates among leading exporters, including the U.S.

Meanwhile, grain shippers complain that the extended interswitching doesn’t go far enough. They’re disappointed that the temporary pilot program could sunset in 18 months.

A coalition of grain and oilseed organizations is campaigning to set the interswitching zone at 500 km for five years. They say interswitching is vital for increasing competition in the rail transportation sector, where most shippers are captive to one of two national railways. As well, these groups say extended interswitching would enhance Canada’s reputation as a reliable supplier.

We question why government regulators need another interswitching pilot project. The Fair Rail for Grain Farmers Act, in place between 2014 and 2017, gave ample opportunity over three years to assess whether the 160 km interswitching zone provided the desired effects.

Mostly the grains sector was pleased with how those provisions affected their service. While relatively small volumes of grain transferred to a different carrier during that time, the fact they could was enough to extract better rates or service from the originating carrier.

For example, the Grain Monitoring Program shows that interswitching resulted in savings of almost $4 million and nearly 1,300 additional rail cars put into service during the 2016 crop year.

However, the sector identified shortcomings.

For example, you can count on one hand the number of interchange facilities on the Prairies large enough to accommodate unit trains, yet Western Grain Elevators Association data shows more than 80 per cent of the grain moved by rail out of Western Canada moves in unit trains of 100 cars or more.

If the sector is to capture the full benefits of interswitching, there must be more than a catchment-area expansion. There must also be a coinciding investment in interchange capacity.

It is unrealistic to expect the railways to make those investments. Likewise, it’s unlikely the private sector would take up the challenge without a long-term commitment to enshrine shippers’ access to interswitching. Producer groups want the government to build it.

The grain elevators association says that a 160 km zone would place more than 90 per cent of the grain elevators in Western Canada within interswitching limits.

If it comes down to a tradeoff, gaining statutory access to a zone less than 500 km but for a longer period may be the preferred compromise — if it sets the stage for public-private partnerships investing in efficient interchange capacity.

Let’s hope the politicians get on with it.

Karen Briere, Bruce Dyck, Barb Glen and Mike Raine collaborate in the writing of Western Producer editorials.

 

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