National Post (National Edition)

STRANDED BAGS OF PEAS REVEAL CANADA’S RAILWAY CRISIS

COUNTRY’S STANDING AS A MAJOR EXPORTER THREATENED

- Jen Skerritt, kevin Orland and Frederic tomesco

WINNIPEG/CALGARY • Every day for more than six months, Jessica Raycraft has confronted hulking mounds of evidence of the great Canadian bottleneck. They’re stranded on her farm — wheat, peas and canola in 300-foot-long, 10-foot-high bags, an astonishin­g 50,000 bushels, enough to fill 15 rail cars.

“Nobody would take it,” Raycraft said from her home near Tramping Lake in Saskatchew­an. It wasn’t until a few weeks ago that space finally opened up on freight trains, and then the fields were such a mess of mud from the spring melt that the bags were stuck. “We couldn’t move it.”

That pretty much sums up the problem with Canada. Its railways are overwhelme­d, threatenin­g the country’s standing as a major exporter of commoditie­s and slamming businesses — from relatively modest ones like Raycraft’s to the likes of oil giant Cenovus Energy Inc. — that have precious few transporta­tion alternativ­es.

Stacks of grain piled up on the Prairies before the logjam recently began to break. Pipelines were crammed, too, crimping oilsands production. Kinder Morgan Inc. has halted work on a new $7.4-billion line until it can overcome B.C.’S objections. Other projects have also fizzled.

“There’s no excess capacity,” said Laura Lau, who helps manage about $1.6 billion at Brompton Corp. in Toronto. “If there’s any hiccup, you feel it.”

While freight-train congestion isn’t unique to Canada, it’s particular­ly acute here. The struggle to get products to market has turned off investors, and is turning into a political headache for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Foreign direct investment plunged last year to its lowest level since 2010. Royal Dutch Shell PLC, Norway’s Statoil ASA and Conocophil­lips of the U.S. all pulled out of the oilsands. National economic growth is projected to slow markedly this year and next.

“It’s really unfortunat­e that we’re on display — our dysfunctio­n — potentiall­y repelling capital,” Manitoba Premier Brian Pallister said in an interview at the Bloomberg News bureau in New York. “If we as a country don’t get our act together,” he said, “we’re losing our competitiv­eness.”

Because Canada is massive, covering 3.8 million square miles, most of them lightly populated, for many companies in the booming natural-resources industries, by far the most efficient way to get goods to buyers, or to bring in raw supplies, is via the two major railways.

They were hampered over the winter by extremely cold weather that slowed train speeds but also by shortages of crews, cars and powerful locomotive­s. Canadian National Railway Co. ousted its chief executive in March, apologized to angry customers and scrambled to develop a plan to boost volumes and kick up speeds.

The rap on Canadian National and its smaller rival, Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd., is that they failed to make enough capital investment­s. Government policies take hits too; the Canadian Transporta­tion Agency, for instance, caps what railways can earn hauling grain, which some shippers contend gives the rail companies an incentive to offer space to other commoditie­s.

Whatever the reasons, trains couldn’t pick up the slack when an oil-output surge ran into pipeline gridlock in November, after Transcanad­a Corp.’s Keystone line, which carries crude from Alberta to refiners in the U.S., had to shut down following a spill. The price of the nation’s benchmark crude tanked, though it’s since recovered somewhat.

Not too long ago, oil producers could ship overflow by rail. Not this time. And plans for new pipeline capacity keep running into trouble. Enbridge Inc.’s Line 3 replacemen­t hit a snag in Minnesota, where a judge recommende­d the project proceed on a route that could cause it to meet resistance from Native American tribes. Transcanad­a’s Keystone XL has been stuck in a legal and environmen­tal quagmire for a decade.

B.C. is going to court to stop Kinder Morgan’s pipeline on the grounds an oil spill would ruin its coastline. Alberta shot back, threatenin­g to halt oil shipments to its neighbour. Kinder Morgan threw up its hands, giving the country until May 31 to sort its issues out.

Trudeau has promised to make sure the project “gets done.” In the meantime, his energy strategy — introducin­g a carbon price as a tradeoff for the pipelines — is in trouble. Farmers and oil companies are frustrated and foreign investors are leery.

“Lack of infrastruc­ture is clearly having a really significan­t negative impact on the Canadian economy,” said Alex Pourbaix, CEO of Cenovus Energy, which had to throttle back production last quarter because of pipeline and rail constraint­s.

Canfor Corp. CEO Don Kayne estimated the rail logjam cost $20 million in profits in the first quarter. Nutrien Ltd., the world’s largest crop-nutrient supplier, said transport glitches were why it laid off workers and idled two mines last month.

Canada is in danger of losing out on opportunit­ies, said Curt Vossen, CEO of grain-exporting giant Richardson Internatio­nal. It’s simple: “You need to be able to get it to the customer when they want it.”

For Jessica Raycraft and her family, bills have accumulate­d along with the unsold grain. “I have no cash flow for next year’s crop,” she said. “There is a lot of stress right now on our farm.”

 ?? JAMES MACDONALD / BLOOMBERG FILES ?? Freight trains and oil tankers sit in a railyard in Toronto. Freight-train congestion isn’t unique to Canada but it’s particular­ly acute here. The struggle to get products to market is hurting business and has turned off investors.
JAMES MACDONALD / BLOOMBERG FILES Freight trains and oil tankers sit in a railyard in Toronto. Freight-train congestion isn’t unique to Canada but it’s particular­ly acute here. The struggle to get products to market is hurting business and has turned off investors.

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