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CP reports best ever month of grain movement to Vancouver.

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    CP reports best ever month of grain movement to Vancouver.

    CP reports best-ever month of grain movement to Vancouver; reiterates call for collaboration not criticism

    CP News

    Canadian Pacific (TSX: CP) (NYSE: CP) announced that, despite a weather-delayed harvest, October was its best-ever month for Western Canadian grain movement to Vancouver and stands ready to work with its supply chain partners through the 2016/17 season to transport a bumper crop to world markets.

    A record 15,865 carloads were moved to West Coast ports in October, besting the previous record of 15,449 carloads in March 2016. Total Western Canadian grain movements in the month climbed 3.9 percent over last year, just off the record set in May 2014.
    Millions of dollars in investment over the past three years by CP as well as new investment by its supply chain partners on grain country elevator capacity and port capacity has already begun to fulfill the promise of greater efficiency, fluidity and velocity. You can find details of the supply chain's weekly performance at [URL="www.cpr.ca/grain"]www.cpr.ca/grain[/URL].

    "I am proud of the CP team and applaud the efforts and early success of our supply chain partners as the crop season begins to accelerate into the colder months," said CP President and Chief Operating Officer Keith Creel. "We continue to focus on providing best-in-class service to our customers and look forward to moving more Western Canadian grain to market for the benefit of farmers, shippers and the Canadian economy."

    CP reiterates that with the winter months and the majority of the 2016/17 crop movement still ahead, finger-pointing and unwarranted criticism of any single component of this complex chain is counter-productive and undermines Canada's reputation as a world-class supplier of grain.

    Misleading and inaccurate data published by the Ag Transport Coalition, then cited repeatedly in the media by paid industry lobbyist Wade Sobkowich, of the Western Grain Elevators Association, continues to promote the notion that an adversarial relationship exists between the railroads and Canada's farm community. The truth is we are partners in driving the Western Canadian economy forward.

    More than three-quarters of CP's Western Canadian grain business uses the Dedicated Train Program (DTP), which allows customers to control their own train assets for a period of 12 months or more. In other words, DTP customers use the capacity they need when they need it.
    Trying to compare DTP performance to an "order fulfillment" model, as the Ag Transport Coalition does, simply does not work.

    "The evidence is clear: CP and its supply chain partners are not only working hard to get this bumper crop to market but succeeding," Creel said. "Together, we are also succeeding in putting old conflicts between railroads and the farmer into the past where they belong."

    About Canadian Pacific
    Canadian Pacific (TSX:CP)(NYSE:CP) is a transcontinental railway in Canada and the United States with direct links to eight major ports, including Vancouver and Montreal, providing North American customers a competitive rail service with access to key markets in every corner of the globe. CP is growing with its customers, offering a suite of freight transportation services, logistics solutions and supply chain expertise. Visit cpr.ca to see the rail advantages of CP.

    SOURCE Canadian Pacific

    #2
    Then why are we being paid 1940's prices for our wheat?

    Comment


      #3
      Hmm, have you been wrong all this time bucket?

      Comment


        #4
        It's been my experience that CN is more reliable than CP when it comes to dedicated trains and the pick up and drop off of cars.

        Comment


          #5
          Probably have been....but tell me why there is 2.5mmt of floating space at the west coast.


          Apparently I am wrong....what is new about that.....other numbers don't match...

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by bucket View Post
            Probably have been....but tell me why there is 2.5mmt of floating space at the west coast.


            Apparently I am wrong....what is new about that.....other numbers don't match...
            What do they consider floating space at the coast? Space in the terminals, on the boats or in the cars?

            Comment


              #7
              2.5 mmt floating space is the boats there or due within the week....but hey CP is doing a great job...
              That's why farmers are still buying bins because the grain is moving so well.


              But wtf do I know.

              Comment


                #8
                Our local elevator on the CP line (well sorta local), has been getting trains every week on schedule, sometimes a few days ahead of schedule...


                But, they are moving 134 cars of 1 product at a time that's on spec for a boat that's docking at the port as the train rolls in.


                Our old grain families (Viterra, Richardson mainly)... can't figure out how logistics work... they had the CWB do it for them.


                There's ships waiting because grain isn't the right grade when it gets to port... they book trains at head office but the country elevators don't have the right product in store for whatever reason...


                I'm not saying the railways are doing everything right, but they aren't 100% to blame.


                Also, there's 1.2MMT of storage that's sitting at the coast that doesn't currently have a contract.... these are ships that know they will move grain at some point but don't have a contract at this time.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Oh it's definitely not all the trains fault that things turn into cluster****s.

                  The merchants will decide they want something from certain terminals when those terminals are already 3/4 full for a dedicated train that's been pushed back another week in favour of something more needed. Probably a boat sitting at port that needs more grain. So then contracts have to get called in asap but not all farmers can jump at boo and get hundreds of tonnes in in a few days. And then if it's wheat they'll want it dried down or blended to 13.5 even though it's already dry at 14, and they'll want it cleaned. But don't clean the canola because screenings are worth more on the coast....

                  And then it gets all sorted and.... the train is late. Or they switch weeks again. These 112 canola should now be 56 canola and 56 2red.

                  Cluster. ****.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    134 cars doesn't fill a boat.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Boats often take more than one product at a time, so its possible it could be sitting at port waiting for a unit train to complete the cargo.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Contracts are signed months in advane for shipping.....why not have it in store at Vancouver instead of this nonsense of ..just in time.

                        The port is barely 60 percent full most weeks and the system isn't working towards a normal harvest or large production.

                        The only reason the railways and graincos are patting themselves on the back are the following:

                        1. A delayed extended harvest
                        2. Shit durum that got trucked not railed to feedlots.

                        3. No one is looking at the numbers ...it's as bad as 2013....


                        4. Wait till the new Port capacity is filled then let's see how it goes.....
                        Last edited by bucket; Nov 10, 2016, 07:05.

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