No, there isn't.
You're talking about grain, so maybe I can just talk about it briefly.
You've described it perfectly. What happens is that the grain shippers will put in an order for cars. Let's just pick a number, let's say 7,000 cars in a given week, all for grain shippers. The railways will come back and say that they can't give 7,000, but they'll give half of that, and they'll bring them on Tuesday. So now the company's been rationed back to half the number of cars it needs.
Then Tuesday comes around, and they have the elevator staff there. I don't know if people appreciate what it takes to build a train, but you have to dedicate your staff to that for that particular day. So the company will have shut down farmer deliveries to that particular station for that day. Maybe they wanted to have those cars previously inspected so they can be certain of the grade of grain going into the cars. So they have the Canadian Grain Commission there, which they are paying.
Tuesday comes, and the cars don't show up. There's been no communication in advance. Somebody contacts the railway, and they say, “Oh yeah, they're coming tomorrow”. So you do the same thing the next day. You shut down farmer deliveries. Now you've lost two days of farmer deliveries, and you've paid the CGC for two days, and you've paid your staff for sitting around for two days.
The cars don't show up on Wednesday. Maybe they show up on Thursday. So they show up. Now you have 24 hours to load those cars, otherwise you don't get your rail incentive. There's a discipline imposed on the grain company to make sure it adheres to the timeline. They have to load those cars quickly. Twenty-four hours seems like a long time to load 100 railcars, but if you do the math, it's about 14 minutes a car, and that includes repositioning and everything like that. It's not a lot of time.
They load the cars, and now the cars are going. A company will plan its logistics so that the cars are not arriving at a destination or at a terminal elevator on top of each other, creating bunching. And they'll also plan to meet a vessel. So now the train is going at a time when you didn't plan for the train to actually arrive at the terminal. And maybe the terminal elevator was sitting around for a few days without any cars to unload, and all of a sudden it gets a glut.
Perhaps it has missed a vessel. Perhaps you've been paying $25,000 a day in vessel demurrage to hold that vessel while waiting for that trainload of canola to arrive.