Can a freight train really move a ton of freight 436 miles on a gallon of fuel?
This question is generated by an advertising campaign by the railroad industry, which is arguing that a good way to reduce greenhouse gas emissions is to move more freight by rail rather than by truck. An example of the industry’s ads can be seen on the Web site www.freightrailworks.org. We’ll remain neutral in the perpetual competition between the railroad industry and the truckers, about which we’ll say more later in this article. But we can vouch for the 436-mile claim. It’s the average for all major U.S. railroads for 2007. Each year the railroads are required to submit reports to the federal Surface Transportation Board, the regulatory body that took over some of the functions of the old Interstate Commerce Commission. The annual reports of each railroad are public information, available on the STB’s Web site. Buried amid all the facts about the number of railroad ties replaced, cubic yards of ballast placed and the cost of new locomotives, the railroads also report totals for the