Producer car orders resilient

By 
Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: November 23, 2012

Producer cars have shown surprising resilience in the post-CWB monopoly world.

Producer car orders are pouring into the system after a slow start and service appears to be good, even though many thought there would be no place for them without a monopoly.

“I thought the producer cars were going to disappear,” said Quorum Corp. manager Mark Hemmes at the Fields on Wheels conference Nov. 6.

“We’re seeing a fair number of producer cars and they’re moving.”

Hemmes’ surprise reflects that of many in the grain industry, who doubted that the railways would willingly provide producer cars or haul them once the CWB lost the power to confront the railways.

Read Also

Last used Sept 15, 2022
The American pea harvest is estimated to be 747,210 tonnes this year, a far cry from the 387,780 tonnes produced during last year’s drought. SKL

Last used Oct 14, 2021. An Israeli company hopes its new high-protein yellow pea variety can be registered next year and commercialized for 2023.  SKL

Yellow peas varieties have several newer options than the ones that producers are regularly growing.  |  File photo

Global pulse consumption to grow

Global per capita pulse consumption is expected to rise 23 per cent by 2034.

Murray Hamilton, grain shipping manager with Canadian Pacific Railway, said the good service reflects the commitment his company made before the monopoly was broken Aug. 1.

“From our perspective, it was going to be no change,” said Hamilton.

If farmers ordered cars, they would be delivered.

Hamilton said producer car orders fell 27 percent year-over-year in the first weeks of the post-monopoly period, but in recent weeks they have caught up to last year levels and in some weeks exceeded them.

About the author

Ed White

Ed White

Markets at a glance

explore

Stories from our other publications