Lethbridge Herald

Grain handlers says CP should shoulder blame

- Dan Healing THE CANADIAN PRESS — CALGARY

The onus for improving grain transporta­tion in Canada is not just on the railways, but will require investment from the “bookends” of the system — the elevators that load the grain and the ports that put it on ships, according to the head of Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd.

“How do we create capacity in the grain franchise where you’re bumping up against bookends that we don’t own and we don’t control?” CEO Keith Creel said at the company’s annual general meeting Thursday.

CP Rail and Canadian National have blamed severe winter weather and a larger-than-expected grain crop for a backlog in grain shipments that have hit their profits and left grain farmers complainin­g about their service. The federal government has introduced a bill that would impose financial penalties to try to get grain moving again as farmers enter the spring planting season.

CP has since made trains longer to carry more grain, turning the old standard of 112 cars into the “gold standard” of 134 cars in a typical grain train, Creel said.

“In lockstep, we’re working with grain companies to encourage and work with them so they invest in the bookends, so that we have the capacity to unload that 134-car train quickly on the West Coast, quickly in Thunder Bay, and conversely loading quickly out on the Prairies.”

But grain-handling companies aren’t interested in sharing the blame for backlogs on the rails, said Wade Sobkowich, executive director of the Western Grain Elevator Associatio­n. Problems with moving grain that came to a head last winter are clearly the responsibi­lity of the railroads, he added.

“It really is an attempt to share the blame among all system participan­ts when really the problem is one of accountabi­lity on the part of the railway,” Sobkowich said, adding he’s heard similar comments before from railways.

His associatio­n represents 340 elevators that collect grain from farmers as well as unloading facilities at the main exporting ports of Vancouver, Prince Rupert and Thunder Bay.

“In Vancouver, for example, we have the capacity to unload 700,000 tonnes of grain per week — and in the country elevator system we have the capacity to load two million tonnes per week, that’s going in all directions,” he said.

“But the railways don’t provide a combined total of 700,000 tonnes to Vancouver a week.”

He said the elevators face financial penalties if they don’t load or unload trains fast enough but the railways don’t, an issue he said the passage of federal Bill C-49 will help to address.

The sweeping transport bill has been delayed as Parliament considers amendments from the Senate. It would give a federal agency powers to investigat­e and prevent grain-shipping bottleneck­s and allow shippers access to more competitiv­e shipping routes, known as interswitc­hing.

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