“Modest gains” is too timid; Railroad carload traffic is “growing strongly”!
January 28, 2011
AAR: “Modest gains” in Week 3 traffic | www.railwayage.com
The AAR categorization of last week’s traffic gains as modest only looks at the absolute numbers: 1.5% carload growth compared to the same week last year. When the weekly gyrations in carload totals in past years and the severe weather that has plagued the nation since the start of this year are considered, any gains reflect a recovering economy and a strong railroad performance. Carload traffic is expected to grow 3% in 2011, which in normal times would reflect a booming economy.
UP Railroad had the biggest intermodal gains in railroad industry during 2011
January 21, 2011
UP Expects More Intermodal From Truckers | www.joc.com
The Union Pacific posted a gain of approximately 20% for intermodal traffic in 2010, outpacing Norfolk Southern (+18%) and CSX (16%) in the East, but also bettering privately held BNSF in the West for which the AAR shows an increase of 10% in intermodal loads. Imported containers contributed most of the additional traffic, but the railroads also claim to be gaining domestic market share, and they are backing their claims with purchase orders for over 5,000 new domestic container cars in 2011.
Early gains in Intermodal may be misleading, but traffic is definitely up
January 14, 2011
Intermodal Traffic Rises 8.6% for Week | www.ttnews.com
Compared to the same week last year, railroad intermodal traffic reported by the AAR jumped 8.6%. However, the holiday schedules were different and that could have affected traffic totals a little. A better measure of this year compared to last will not be available for a couple of weeks yet.
Bring on the double dip! Gasoline to rise to $4.00 in 2011
January 3, 2011
Oil's surge in 2010 paves the way for $4 gasoline | finance.yahoo.com
Gasoline prices rose above $3.00 so rapidly in December that many are predicting that they will keep rising to over $4.00 per gallon. These same pundits say that isn’t that bad, since it represents only $750 per year per motorist. Phrased another way however, let’s say as a new energy tax of $1,200 per household, many would warn of an imminent recession.
Access to the Limited Global Supply of Tellurium is Critically Important
December 5, 2010
First Solar to Acquire 5N Plus to Access Tellurium? Is global tellurium supply really an issue? | www.greentechmedia.com
Even though the supply of all chemical elements in the universe is infinite with regards to the needs or uses for them known by the human race, nonetheless the limited supply of tellurium present at or near the earth's surface, that part of the world in which we do and can mine and recover it , is very limited.The amount of tellurium that can be obtained, not the total amount produced, by any one user, such as First Solar (FSLR), is the limiting factor to their production rate.
Cloud Computing and Chinese Law
November 23, 2010
This article provides a snapshot of the Chinese laws that are applicable to cloud computing issues in China.
Bigger trucks would cost more than they would save
November 23, 2010
US Trucking Industry Pushes For Heavier Trucks On Roads | news.morningstar.com
By some convoluted reasoning, legislators are being asked to save wear and tear on local roads by letting bigger trucks use the Federal Interstate Highway system. The Obama Administration is even endorsing their reasoning. Who let the big rigs get loaded in the first place? Allowing them on the Interstate System will only shift the maintenance costs from the people who made that mistake to the rest of the country.
Surplus railcars still abound, but not as much as the AAR reports
November 18, 2010
Railcar Owners Shrink Idled Car Fleet in October | www.joc.com
The AAR’s most recent tally of surplus railcars totaled over 318,000 units, or about 20% of the national fleet. However, rail traffic is down only 12% from its pre-recession highs. It is more likely that the car surplus is closer to 190,000. This is still a very high number and will depress demand for new cars and lease rates for many months to come, but it will eventually go away as opposed to the surplus numbers reported by the AAR.
Greenbrier’s problems are common to all car builders, but…
November 11, 2010
Greenbrier Q4 loss wider than expected; sees loss in Q1 | www.reuters.com
Greenbrier’s projection that it did not see a turnaround in its near term future and that output and profits might not rebound until the second half of 2011 might be a common theme among all railcar builders. However, Greenbrier’s practice of backlogging “nonbinding” orders often distorts the outlook for the company and the “cancellation” of these orders can produce unnecessary surprises.
Uncertainty is the problem for truckers and railroad intermodal managers
November 1, 2010
Has intermodal container business truly turned the corner? | www.progressiverailroading.com
The weekly intermodal traffic reports from the American Association of Railroads continue to encourage rail executives that the economy will continue to rebound and that traffic will continue to grow in the future, but no one knows for sure. Unfortunately, industry statistics are not available for the commodities moving by truck and railroad intermodal shipments, and gross traffic numbers leave everyone guessing as to what is behind the growth in traffic.
Chesapeake Energy bites the natural gas bullet
January 25, 2012
Flurry of newbuild drilling rig deliveries in 2012 may dampen rig rates
January 20, 2012
Talisman joins the ranks of cautious E&P companies
January 12, 2012
Early signs of caution begin to cloud frontier exploration and production
January 4, 2012
It's too early in the game to write off Shtokman
December 8, 2011