Canadian Prairies - CPKC's Assistant Vice President of Sales and Marketing for Bulk Elizabeth
Hucker says the rail network has bounced back following last month's work stoppage but it will still take more time for
supply chains to fully recover and car cycles to normalize.
She says since that work outage in grain shipping week 3 CPKC has seen a steady increase in demand for rail services to
locations like Thunder Bay, Vancouver, Eastern Canada, the United States, and Mexico.
"In Week 6 we moved just shy of 650,000 metric tons of Canadian grain and grain products and that was actually the
highest week since September of 2023."
She says their operations team, and more broadly, the CPKC organization have been focused on getting the network back
to normal, adding that they've had some positive feedback from grain shippers about how they've been able to
mobilize.
"So we have seen a steady ramp up since week four and are staying close with our customers. With regards to the
corridors in which they need the empties for whether they're shipping to export through Vancouver or Thunder Bay. But
like I said, we've seen a steady improvement over the last couple of weeks."
Hucker noted that on 15 Sep 2024 CPKC hit a weekly unload record of 1,100 cars at Pacific Elevators in
Vancouver.
Their previous record was 1,017 which had been in place since 18 Oct 2020.
"I think you know that is a testament to the work that we're doing out of Vancouver and the recovery that we've
seen in the grain shipping supply chain."
In the coming weeks, CPKC will be announcing the winners of their Elevator of the Year in Canada and the United
States.
Last year's winners in Canada were Vitara at Weyburn, and in the United States with Elbow Lake Co-op.
Glenda-Lee Vossler.
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