Mr. Chair, thank you for inviting me, as a representative of Canadian National, or CN, to testify on the issues and opportunities for Canadian agriculture related to railways.
This is an opportunity for us to emphasize our commitment to meeting the expectations of our customers in the agricultural sector and to stimulating the Canadian economy.
As a leader in rail transportation and a facilitator of trade, CN transports more than 300 million tonnes of goods per year over a network of more than 30,000 kilometres covering Canada and the United States.
Our mandate is to support the Canadian economy by moving goods safely and efficiently for all of our customers. This includes, of course, a wide variety of agricultural products, offering Canadian producers direct rail access to export facilities in Prince Rupert, Vancouver, Thunder Bay, Montreal and other ports on the St. Lawrence.
In recent years, CN has made significant investments in its infrastructure and rolling stock, which have increased the capacity and fluidity of its network. We expect to receive delivery of 750 new high-yield grain hopper cars in the coming year, on top of a previous investment of 3,500 hopper cars since 2018, when amendments to the act enabled such investments.
Those investments in grain transportation have been made alongside the significant capital investments made by grain companies in enhancing end-to-end grain supply chain capacity. The results are striking.
Over the past two decades, the amount of the prairie grain crop moved in the fall by CN has consistently increased. In fact, this year, CN set a record for September to October grain movement, breaking the six-million-tonne mark for grain shipments. What used to be shipments of 375,000 tonnes per week in 2009 have grown to over 700,000 tonnes per week today. In the first week of October this year, CN set an all-time record for the most grain shipped in a single week, at over 838,000 metric tons. This service performance highlights our commitment to grain movements and CN’s resilience in meeting customer demand.
Constant labour uncertainty has resonating effects on Canada’s economy. The government should direct its attention toward all components of the supply chain, as opposed to imposing regulatory burdens on specific links.
This brings me to extended regulated interswitching. Under this pilot program, Canadian shippers, particularly large grain companies, are incentivized to contract with U.S. railways because they receive a regulated, below-market rate. This harms Canada’s economic sovereignty by diverting jobs and investment dollars south of the border. When these negative impacts were recognized in the Emerson report, extended interswitching was sunset by this very government in 2017. It was replaced with long-haul interswitching, which gives access to a competing railway up to 1,200 kilometres away at a market rate. This tool remains available to all prairie grain shippers.
All grain movements start in a truck, meaning farmers have a choice of which grain elevator will receive their product and, by association, a choice of which railway or railways serve that elevator. CN competes fiercely with railways in both Canada and the U.S. and with other modes of transportation, and Canadian railways are already subject to a maximum revenue entitlement governing the movement of western grain.
Average Canadian freight rates are among the lowest in the world. Policies like extended interswitching put us on an uneven playing field, and there is no evidence that the policy provides any direct financial benefit to farmers. We strongly recommend that the policy be sunset in March 2025.
CN has approximately 14,000 grade crossings in its network, and almost $200 million has been spent overall to comply with Transport Canada’s grade crossings regulations. When these standards were adopted in 2014, we raised concerns about the high cost to be assumed by some private users. Since then, we’ve been working with Transport Canada to seek alternatives to limit the cost of upgrades to be assumed by farmers.
We are pleased to say that with the support of provincial agricultural associations, exemptions were granted for the vast majority of the crossings. What was once 57 non-compliant crossings has been reduced to only seven in Ontario and one in Quebec. We are confident that we will be able to find practical solutions for the limited number of grade crossings remaining.
Thank you, and we look forward to your questions.