• Oil Trains

  • Discussion of present-day CM&Q operations, as well as discussion of predecessors Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway (MMA) and Bangor & Aroostook Railroad (BAR).
Discussion of present-day CM&Q operations, as well as discussion of predecessors Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway (MMA) and Bangor & Aroostook Railroad (BAR).

Moderator: MEC407

  by KSmitty
 
gokeefe wrote:
CN9634 wrote:More oil runs and continues to run over the MMA than PAR. They run dediated oil trains about once or twice a week as well as oil comes in on general freight (unlike Pan Am)
Just to clarify, you're indicating that MMA is regularly running oil trains, perhaps more often than PAR?
Yes.
  by gokeefe
 
KSmitty wrote:
gokeefe wrote:
CN9634 wrote:More oil runs and continues to run over the MMA than PAR. They run dediated oil trains about once or twice a week as well as oil comes in on general freight (unlike Pan Am)
Just to clarify, you're indicating that MMA is regularly running oil trains, perhaps more often than PAR?
Yes.
That's great news.
  by CN9634
 
There is at least 1 DEDICATE move per week, usually 80 or 100 cars of oil but also every train coming in has anywhere from 10 to 60 oil cars on it. Every train. MMA's problems right now are lack of motors and crews.
  by JayBee
 
There is a 606-276 on the Lineup for tonight, August 18th, 2012 at Chicago Bensenville Yd. bound for the MM&A and St. John, NB
  by fogg1703
 
Curious if loose car movements are still common on MMA as it seems there is an uptick on CN of blocks of crude to Irving.
  by KSmitty
 
NBSR's westbound Monday had a LONG block of oil on the rear behind manifest and 20 or so empty auto racks. Don't know if this is common or not still, but its still happening on occasion.
  by gpp111
 
The thirsty oil refineries on the east coast of North America are being pinched by their reliance on high priced foreign oil pegged at Brent pricing. This is significantly more expensive than shale oil coming from the Bakken formation. The largest grouping of such refineries are along the Delaware River in and south of Philadelphia. These refineries are trying to get more oil from the Bakken but generally lack rail facilities to unload product since these plants are set up to unload barges and tankers and not rail cars. There is a plan to construct one large oil car unloading facility, the product would be transferred to barges, that would then move up the coast (in some cases just a few miles) where they would be unloaded at the refinery.

http://articles.philly.com/2012-11-28/b ... stone-rail

Perhaps the barge routing from Albany to the Irving refinery in St. John would be like this. Not replacing but supplanting rail transport of Bakken crude. Of course, Irving likes to squeeze all its suppliers and by having as many suppliers as possible (MM&A, PanAm, CN) and now barge for this oil, this keeps shipment costs low. So the MM&A certainly can benefit from these oil trains but I remember the day when Irving used Iron Roads (Canadian American) against CN when routing for paper, and the revenue per unit was so low that it was hardly profitable. One thing for sure, these oil trains will be hard on the tracks and there will have to be an investment to keep them up to snuff.
  by fogg1703
 
While the Irving's shrewd business practices cannot be understated, do they have control over the routing?
  by KSmitty
 
fogg1703 wrote:While the Irving's shrewd business practices cannot be understated, do they have control over the routing?
Not over the specific routing, but over the general routing. Irving can seek quotes from CN, MMA, PAR, and choose the best price. Ultimately though, if PAR, for example, chose to run the trains through Worcester rather than Rotterdam that decision falls on the railroad not the customer. So long as contract price and delivery times are met...
  by fogg1703
 
Well to a certain degree the routings are set because of where the train is sourced. A CP train is MMA bound, while a BNSF train is PAR and now CN bound. As predicted the Irving's are keeping this competition very tight as the contracts are a month or two at the most before they renegotiate.
  by fromway
 
Has MMA picked up any of the oil trains since the PAN AM wreck? There were pictures of new equipment with oil cans.
  by fromway
 
CP put some oil cans on the ground in Minnesota. One ruptured and two others leaked when moving them. EPA says that they are having trouble cleaining up due to cold weather. The oil is clumping up.
  by fromway
 
My mistake. It was the CP that put the cars over, not the CN.
  by gokeefe
 
fromway wrote:CP put some oil cans on the ground in Minnesota. One ruptured and two others leaked when moving them. EPA says that they are having trouble cleaining up due to cold weather. The oil is clumping up.
That is actually a good thing as it prevents absorption into the ground, spread of the spill and lowers any hazard of combustion. Obviously a big pain for the normal cleanup methods but it really does help restrict the environmental damage.
  by CN9634
 
The MMA has been moving more oil than Pan Am from the start. They have also been running it longer (time wise). They run about 3 unit jobs a week and many others mixed in general freight.
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