US railroad group wants to make tracking train cargo as easy as on
Amazon
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[February 15, 2024] By
Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. shoppers can easily track Amazon packages
to their front door, but big railroad customers can't see the real-time
location of shipments of BMW luxury cars, fuel or fertilizer as they
crisscross the country. A U.S. coalition of railroad executives and
their customers are working to change that.
The project, called RailPulse, comes as the $99-billion U.S. freight
railroad industry seeks to bolster volume that has been stagnant for
more than a decade and as customers demand better service. It is
establishing standards and building a unified railcar GPS tracking
system. The effort, which relies on collaboration between partners whose
interests do not always converge, promises to improve planning and
ultimately service and efficiency, participants said.
Alan Shaw, CEO of railroad Norfolk Southern, said the 200-year-old U.S.
freight rail industry has been slow to adopt certain cutting-edge
technology. As a result, it can't tell a carmaker like BMW the exact
location of a load of sedans as they move through the system.
E-commerce giant Amazon, meanwhile, has helped set a standard for
transportation companies. Railroads need to keep pace, RailPulse founder
Mike McClellan said.
"We want more people to feel more comfortable picking rail -
particularly this new generation of transportation managers who are ...
used to seeing things in real time," said McClellan, who is also Norfolk
Southern's chief strategy officer.
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RailPulse envisions a revenue model where users pay a one-time charge to
equip railcars with tracking technology, periodic fees for
communications services and software updates and a monthly subscription
fee of $3.50 per car.
It aims to sign up all six major U.S. freight railroads and is halfway
there with Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific and Canadian Pacific Kansas
City onboard.
It is also recruiting the nation's 600 "short-line" train operators like
partner RDC, a family-owned railroad investment and management company.
Other participants include railcar leasing companies like GATX and
Greenbrier, which are among the owners of the 1.6 million railcars in
use nationally.
Its first customer is global crop trader and processor Bunge. Bunge,
also a railcar owner, will have access to RailPulse when the system
officially launches in the third quarter.
"We will be better positioned to efficiently move our products and those
of our customers ... from the farmer all the way to the end user," said
Terry McDermott, Bunge's logistics director for North America.
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Train cars sit at a grain terminal in the port of Vancouver/File
Photo
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DAUNTING CHALLENGE
The project is far more complex than tracking deliveries of Amazon
packages or pizzas from Domino's, which involve one company, one
customer, and one transaction.
The median length of a U.S. freight train is roughly 5,400 feet
(1,646 meters), or roughly 90 cars, with a small fraction exceeding
14,000 feet (4,267 meters). Trains include equipment from multiple
car owners and cargo from many customers.
Railcar location data typically comes from landside scanners that
provide location data at various points during a journey. RailPulse
will use GPS trackers, which are already federally mandated on big
rigs that rival rains for cargo.
While the lack of a railcar power source hindered adoption of GPS
technology, improvements in solar power and GPS technology have
changed that, said Josh Perkes, vice president of Union Pacific's
Loup Logistics, who leads that railroad's RailPulse effort.
Still, large transportation data-sharing projects like RailPulse are
rare, said Dan Pellathy, a fellow at the Global Supply Chain
Institute at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville.
"The data collection alone is a pretty daunting problem," Pellathy
said.
Companies also don't like sharing information with competitors, he
said. And even when they get over that hurdle, data from disparate
systems must be secured, standardized, checked for accuracy and
subject to the same rules across the network.
Then it must be transformed into usable data that is available to
some users and hidden from others for reasons of safety and
confidentiality, Pellathy said.
One example of such an undertaking is the federally mandated shift
from paper to electronic medical records in the United States - a
project that has been in the works for more than a decade.
Data-sharing technology is improving to meet customer demands for
more visibility, said Sandy Gosling, a partner at consultancy
McKinsey.
"That train has left the station," Gosling said.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles and Timothy Aeppel in
New York)
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