Supply Chain Council of European Union | Scceu.org
Freight

Nelson: Runaway Freight Expansion on a Crumbling Coast

Rail industry insiders can’t seem to help themselves. Like the band playing on the Titanic, they play the same refrain on a continuous loop:

  • Passenger rail demand is growing exponentially” (it’s not). 
  • “Coastal rail expansion is about passengers” (it’s really about freight). 
  • “If we build it, they will come” (not likely given current trends). 
  • We can mitigate for erosion” (for how long and at what cost?) and 
  • “Rail is our future” (many futurists believe it’s our past). 

Passenger Rail Demand Is A Tiny Fraction Of Capacity

Metrolink’s Serra Siding Project was justified, in part, by a study projecting an Orange County population increase of 34% by 2040. When citizens pointed out they were using projections from an outdated 2011 study that was grossly overstated, they adjusted it downward to a still optimistic 16% by 2045, extrapolating that an increased population will automatically correlate with more seats on trains. In fact, South Orange County passenger rail was languishing for at least a decade before the pandemic. Today, both Metrolink and Amtrak are lumbering along the coast at a fraction of capacity. 

Related posts

Natilus signs $6B in purchase agreements for autonomous freighter

scceu

Global Sea Freight Forwarding Market Growth and Share with Developed Economies 2020-2026

scceu

DP World Partners with MasterCard to Facilitate Port Payments

scceu