Total US coal train loadings have slipped following consecutive
weeks of gains, with volumes falling across the major basins.
Data filed by the four major US railroads -- CSX, Union Pacific,
BSNF and Norfolk Southern -- for the week ended June 23 shows
nationwide coal
loadings averaged 98.1 trains/d, down from 102.3 trains/d the
previous week. Counts had grown for two straight weeks before the
decline, but totals remained well above an average of 88.7 trains/d
seen during the seasonal slowdown from mid-March to mid-April.
Powder River Basin loadings fell for the first time in seven weeks,
dropping to 55.7 trains/d from 58.7 trains/d the prior week.
Central Appalachian loadings slipped to 16 trains/d from 16.4
trains/d, and Illinois Basin totals fell to 6.9 trains/d from 8.6
trains/d.
Northern Appalachia was the only major basin to see an increase in
loadings, with volumes rising to 11.2 trains/d from 10.9 trains/d
the previous week.
In other production areas, Utica Basin loadings grew to 4.6 trains/d
from 4.1 trains/d, and loadings from the outside primary basins
inched higher to 3.8 trains/d from 3.6 trains/d.
--Jim Levesque,
jim.levesque@spglobal.com
--Edited by Jason Lindquist,
jason.lindquist@spglobal.com
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