New York New York USA
Indianapolis Indiana USA - Railway Interchange kicked off 2 Oct 2023 with CPKC Senior Vice
President Coby Bullard covering his railroad's 14 Apr 2023 merger to form North America's first and only
trans-national, plus its partnership with shortlines and its hydrogen locomotive program.
The opening session in Indianapolis was hosted by AREMA, RSI, RSSI, and REMSA and sponsored by Freight Car
America.
As CPKC nears its six-month anniversary, work is under way to build the new company, which combined Canadian Pacific
(CP) and Kansas City Southern (KCS), and the culture, said Bullard, who joined CP in 2017 and now heads up CPKC Sales
and Marketing-Merchandise, ECP, Transload and Business Development.
"It's not easy work," he said, "but it's fun. It's exciting."
Historically, railroading has been about east-west connections of population and production centers, Bullard told
attendees.
CPKC is now filling the need for a north-south connector, a single linehaul solution for the U.S., Canada, and
Mexico.
Owning the track all the way through, not only "unlocks investment," he said, but also provides "better
products and services for customers in all three countries so they can continue to grow their
business."
CP about five years ago held an executive retreat to address "big ideas" for future growth, according to
Bullard, and one of those ideas became a "driver" of its merger with KCS.
Nearshoring, the relocating of manufacturers from Asia, mostly China, to North America, mostly Mexico.
Bullard outlined the following CPKC "value propositions" and growth areas during his
presentation:
➤ CPKC is seeing growth in all markets, across construction and building products, steel, and
aluminum in the automotive space, and automotive manufacturing, for example. The customers listed on and the locations
mapped on Bullard's presentation slide represent a total of nearly US$20 billion in industrial development projects
that have broken ground and will be coming on line in the next 24-48 months. This is all carload business, Bullard
said, and does not include the approximately US$10 billion Tesla is spending in Monterrey, Mexico, to build an
automotive manufacturing facility on the CPKC line, and the US$15 billion being invested in that region for Tesla
suppliers.
➤ Customers are investing in North American supply chain solutions that leverage CPKC rail service.
Bullard offered the example of Aluminum Dynamics, a new subsidiary of Fort Wayne, Indiana-based Steel Dynamics. To get
into the aluminum market, Steel Dynamics wanted to build an end-to-end supply chain, he explained. The company will use
CPKC to haul aluminum ingots from eastern Canada to new slab-production facilities in Arizona and Monterrey, to carry
the slabs to a rolling facility in Mississippi, and to send the rolled aluminum to the packaging and automotive
industries in Detroit, the southeastern U.S., and Mexico. Steel Dynamics is spending US$4 billion on the Arizona,
Monterrey, and Mississippi facilities for the project, Bullard said. The Arizona and Monterrey facilities are expected
to ship 1,750 carloads per year to Mississippi.
➤ The CPKC network has 6,000 acres of land available for development. "This gives us the
ability to go out to our customers or partners and say, How can we leverage this land to become more efficient in our
rail operations? How can we leverage this land to co-locate with a customer and bring somebody that wants to build a
new facility onto our railroad?" Bullard said. CPKC and Americold in June teamed on a cold-storage facility
co-location initiative.
➤ As part of CPKC's roughly US$3 billion capital plan for 2023, Bullard told attendees that it is
focusing on three core projects, installing by year-end 2024 a second international rail bridge at the U.S./Mexico
border that will connect the cities of Laredo, Texas, and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and "double-plus" capacity
(through an approximately US$100 million investment), expanding by year-end 2026 its Bensenville Yard in Chicago
(through an approximately US$300 million investment), and building or expanding 26 sidings at the mid-point of its
network (through an approximately US$275 million investment).
➤ CPKC in May introduced daily intermodal service between the Midwest and Mexico with trains
MMX-180 and MMX-181, linking Chicago, Kansas City, Texas markets, Monterrey, and San Luis Potosi. "Our CPKC
transit time from cut-off to release is 3.9 days," Bullard said. "A single-driver truck averages four days.
Our stated goal is five days, so we're beating that by a full day. Our goal is to convert 75,000 to 100,000 trucks off
the road."
During the Q&A portion of his presentation, Bullard highlighted CPKC's partnership with shortlines and its
hydrogen locomotive program, which CP began in December 2020 with the retrofit of an existing diesel-electric linehaul
locomotive.
"I can't stress enough how important shortlines are to our business," Bullard said, noting that 65 percent of
CPKC's growth in carload business included shortlines at origination or destination.
"The high-touch service that shortlines provide to customers and the ability for them to work on creative
solutions to help customers, help us, and help themselves grow is a win-win-win," he said.
CPKC has invested in, and added to, its shortline team to provide support.
"The time for hydrogen locomotives is now," Bullard told attendees at the Railway Interchange session's
conclusion.
CPKC currently has two low-horsepower units, a four-axle and a six-axle, which are being tested in
Calgary.
This month it will have ready for testing a high-horsepower six-axle unit, he reported.
In June, CPKC signed an agreement with CSX to develop additional hydrogen-powered locomotives, and Bullard told
attendees that the Jacksonville, Florida-based Class I "will bring on 20 plus units, 25 units, and CPKC is also
going to ramp up production at roughly the same rate, so expect to see hydrogen locomotives expand and expand
quickly."
Bullard pointed out that while the use of hydrogen is the most environmentally friendly solution for locomotive
power, "right now it does not make economic sense, but we'll continue to work to get the economics where they
need to be."
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