Mexico City Mexico - The Mexican Ministry of Infrastructure, Communications, and Transportation,
and the state of Nuevo Leon have reached an agreement with Canadian Pacific Kansas City Southern de Mexico to study
commuter service in the Monterrey area.
CPKC de Mexico has committed to providing information to the government agencies, a railway spokesman said
today.
Mexican officials are proposing that the Monterrey Suburban Train will include 26 stations on a 46.6 mile corridor
between Monterrey and Pesqueria, according to an item published this week in the government's official
gazette.
CPKC CEO Keith Creel, and former KCS CEO Pat Ottensmeyer, who is serving as an advisor on Mexico issues, met with
Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador earlier this year to discuss how the merged railway can help boost
Mexico's economy.
The president noted that he wanted to launch passenger service from Mexico City to the north to help ease highway
traffic congestion.
CPKC agreed to fund a third-party capacity study that will show what improvements might be necessary to provide
reliable passenger service and protect the flow of freight in the high-growth corridor between Nuevo Laredo and Mexico
City.
"We're going to work with the government of Mexico. If we can be part of the solution and help them realize their
aspirations, protect freight, and provide for passenger, we're going to do it," Creel told the RailTrends
conference last month.
"As required by our concession, CPKC de México will work closely with the Mexican Federal Government to evaluate
passenger service on that corridor. The draft decree emphasizes that the public freight rail service will be respected,
and as such, we do not expect an adverse impact on our concession. CPKC has extensive experience hosting passenger rail
services in multiple locations across its network in the United States and Canada while efficiently managing freight
service," CPKC has said.
Author unknown.
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provisions in Section 29 of the
Canadian Copyright Modernization Act.