Ankeny,
Iowa – Union
Pacific was
selected as the
top performing
railroad by
leading U.S.
agricultural
shippers in the
second annual
Soy
Transportation
Coalition (STC)
Rail Customer
Satisfaction
Index.
Survey
respondents
provided
Canadian
National a 38
percent increase
in its score
from the
previous year
– giving the
company a third
place ranking
among the seven
Class I
railroads.
In 2010,
Canadian
National
finished in last
place.
The
survey was
completed
anonymously by
agricultural
shippers of
various sizes
and scale of
operations and
was comprised of
the same eleven
questions from
2010 categorized
under: 1.) On
Time
Performance; 2.)
Customer
Service; and 3.)
Costs. For
most questions,
participants
were asked to
rate each of the
seven Class I
railroads on a
scale from 1-10
with ten being
the highest and
one being the
lowest.
After
combining the
results from the
eleven survey
questions, Union
Pacific received
the overall
highest rating.
The company
finished first
in eight out of
eleven
questions.
BNSF, the top
rated railroad
in 2010, slipped
to second place
and was the only
railroad to have
a lower
aggregate score
compared to the
previous year.
Canadian
National’s
overall rating
jumped 38
percent from
2010. On
average,
respondents
provided
railroads a 10
percent higher
score than in
2010.
Canadian Pacific
was rated as the
lowest
performing
railroad –
receiving a last
place ranking in
nine out of
eleven
questions.
Soy
Transportation
Coalition Rail
Customer
Satisfaction
Index –
Overall Ratings:
1.
Union Pacific
Railroad
2.
Burlington
Northern Santa
Fe Railroad
3.
Canadian
National Railway
4.
Norfolk Southern
Railway
5.
CSX
Transportation
6.
Kansas City
Southern Railway
7.
Canadian Pacific
Railway
“Last
year, our
nation’s
railroads were
confronted
with the
challenge of
not only
accommodating
an abundant
harvest, but
also having to
do so in a
very
compressed
period of
time,”
explains Mike
Steenhoek,
executive
director of
the Soy
Transportation
Coalition.
“While many
concerns
continue to
linger,
agricultural
shippers are
increasingly
pleased with
the rail
service they
are
receiving.”
Of
particular
note was the
dramatic
improvement of
Canadian
National
Railway over
the previous
year.
Mike Steenhoek
says,
“According
to the
feedback
received from
a number of
agricultural
shippers,
Canadian
National has
increasingly
reached out to
its customers,
solicited
their input,
and has
instituted a
number of
performance
measures to
become a more
service
oriented
railroad.
They
demonstrate
that a
significant
amount of
improvement
can occur in a
short period
of time.”
As
in 2010,
railroads
received
higher ratings
for customer
service than
for cost
issues.
Respondents
continue to
suggest
railroads
could better
explain rail
service costs.
Moreover, rail
customers
remain
skeptical of
accessorial
charges –
arguing that
they are
simply another
avenue for
generating
revenue rather
than a
legitimate
cost.
“The
opinions
captured in
the STC survey
represent the
overwhelming
majority of
the grain and
oilseeds
transported in
the United
States,”
says Mike
Steenhoek.
“The survey
therefore
allows us to
better
determine
whether
railroads are
successful in
meeting the
needs of its
agricultural
customers.”
Class
I railroads
are the
largest
railroads in
the country
with an annual
operating
revenue
exceeding $378
million.
Seven
railroads are
classified as
Class Is: Burlington
Northern Santa
Fe Railway
(BNSF), CSX
Transportation,
Kansas City
Southern
Railway,
Norfolk
Southern
Railway, and
Union Pacific
Railroad.
Canadian
National
Railway and
Canadian
Pacific
Railway are
also
considered
Class Is due
to their
significant
trackage lines
in the United
States.
The
seven Class I
railroads
annually
transport more
than 24
million tons
of soybeans,
17 million
tons of
soybean meal,
and 6 million
tons of
soybean oil.
The
full results
of the survey,
including a
copy of the
questionnaire,
can be
accessed at www.soytransportation.org.
####
Established
in 2007, the
Soy
Transportation
Coalition is
comprised of
ten state
soybean
boards, the
American
Soybean
Association,
and the United
Soybean Board.
The goal of
the
organization
is to position
the soybean
industry to
benefit from a
transportation
system that
delivers cost
effective,
reliable, and
competitive
service.