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Title:

Shared Intermodal Terminals and Potential for Improving Efficiency of Rail-Rail Interchange

Accession Number:

01045205

Record Type:

Component

Availability:

Transportation Research Board Business Office

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Abstract:

While largely due to conditions outside their control, the configuration and setting of current intermodal rail terminals contribute to congestion and increased freight handling volumes that have resulted in additional transportation costs for shippers and carriers. Although a substantial body of research has focused on improving the efficiency of port operations and multi-modal freight shipments (particularly ship/rail, and ship/truck operations), transmodal shipments (flows within the components of a single mode) have received far less attention. Because of the rapidly growing volume of freight entering North American ports bound for the Midwest, particularly Chicago, improving rail/rail interchange is becoming increasingly critical to overall system efficiency. With average rail/rail transmodal interchanges between Chicago’s terminals exceeding 24 hours, these interchanges represent an increasing fraction of overall preventable delays that is a major concern for freight forwarders. This paper identifies the main inefficiencies of current intermodal rail interchange operations (such as fragmented terminals, unnecessary intercity truck trips, shipment inefficiency, and congestion). It also investigates the concept and potential of shared intermodal facility solutions (multiple railroads concentrate transmodal interchange at one facility), and analyzes governmental and market impediments to the development of shared intermodal facilities. Shared intermodal facilities will bring enormous quantifiable financial, time and energy benefits to shippers and carriers. However, before such facilities can be developed, there is a critical need to gather performance metrics on rail line volume entering the region, the percentage of that volume that is transmodal traffic, and the speed and cost of current interchange. The potential to reduce energy consumption and terminal heavy-duty truck emissions are also explored. Published performance metrics and estimates from field practitioners are used in this preliminary analysis of potential benefits, laying the groundwork for future simulation modeling efforts designed to better quantify these benefits.

Monograph Accession #:

01042056

Report/Paper Numbers:

07-2563

Language:

English

Corporate Authors:

Transportation Research Board

500 Fifth Street, NW
Washington, DC 20001 United States

Authors:

Lanigan Sr, Jack
Zumerchik, John
Rodrigue, Jean-Paul
Guensler, Randall L
Rodgers, Michael Owen

Pagination:

17p

Publication Date:

2007

Conference:

Transportation Research Board 86th Annual Meeting

Location: Washington DC, United States
Date: 2007-1-21 to 2007-1-25
Sponsors: Transportation Research Board

Media Type:

CD-ROM

Features:

Figures (4) ; References; Tables (2)

Subject Areas:

Administration and Management; Energy; Finance; Freight Transportation; Highways; Marine Transportation; Railroads; Society; Terminals and Facilities; I10: Economics and Administration

Source Data:

Transportation Research Board Annual Meeting 2007 Paper #07-2563

Files:

TRIS, TRB

Created Date:

Feb 8 2007 7:16PM