Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

newsworthy

North American transborder freight flow plunged 3.3% in October

Combined imports and exports to both Canada and Mexico post biggest drop in 24 months and fourth decline in past six months, government says.

The value of freight flowing across America's northern and southern borders decreased sharply in October across all transportation modes, according to government figures released today. The total value of imports and exports traded with Canada and Mexico was $107.1 billion in October, down 3.3% compared to October 2018 for its biggest drop in 24 months.

The decrease followed a year-over-year drop of 0.2% in September and a drop of 1.7% in August, according to numbers from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS), an agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation. Previously, the statistics had risen 1.2% in July, but were also down 2.3% in June, after rising 2.4% in May. The monthly statistic had not posted a drop as large as 3.3% since October of 2016, during a year in which the U.S. recorded its slowest economic growth in five years.


That churning pattern of dips and spikes comes at a time when lawmakers are debating updates to the proposed United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) that could replace 1994's North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and while the White House levies a series of tariffs on international trade that have pushed retailers and manufacturers to seek greater clarity on stormy business conditions.

Zooming in for more detail on October's stats, trucks were the mode that moved the great majority of the month's transborder freight at $68.2 billion of value, with rail coming in a distant second place at $14.5 billion. The balance of the freight was moved via vessel ($8.2 billion), pipeline ($6.3 billion), and air ($5.0 billion).

In the trucking category, the northern and southern borders supported roughly equal amounts of freight, with $30.0 billion moving across the U.S.-Canada line and $38.2 billion across the U.S.-Mexico line. More specifically, the three busiest truck border ports, supporting a combined 45.6% of total transborder truck freight, were: Laredo, Texas, $15.6 billion; Detroit, Michigan, $9.4 billion; and El Paso, Texas, $6.1 billion.

Inside those cross-border trucks was chiefly the following loads: computers and parts worth $13.3 billion, electrical machinery worth $11.6 billion, and motor vehicles and parts worth $10.1 billion.

Digging into the rail numbers, the results were about the same, with the total of $14.5 billion in value balanced between $7.9 billion on the Canadian border and $6.6 billion on the Mexican border. The three busiest rail border ports, handling a sum total of 53.9% of the month's total transborder rail freight, were: Laredo, Texas, $3.7 billion; Detroit, Michigan, $2.1 billion; and Port Huron, Michigan, $2.0 billion.

And inside the month's rail cars were three commodities that totaled 61.9% of total transborder rail freight: motor vehicles and parts ($7.1 billion), mineral fuels ($1.1 billion), and computers and parts ($0.7 billion).

The Latest

More Stories

Forklift in warehouse

Hyster-Yale partners with Dept. of Defense’s SkillBridge program

After years in the military, service members and their spouses can find the transition to civilian life difficult. For many, a valuable support on that journey is the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) SkillBridge program. During their final 180 days of service, participants in the program are connected with companies that provide them with civilian work experience and training. There is no cost to those companies while the service member continues receiving military compensation and benefits.

Among the SkillBridge program’s supporters is Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, which provides lift trucks and technology solutions, primarily under the Hyster and Yale brand names. Hyster-Yale and its independently owned dealers partner with SkillBridge to recruit and train current service members, specifically for positions as skilled technicians.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

Greg Swift of Schneider National

Truck driver achieves 5 million miles without an accident

Raise your hand if you think you’re a pretty good driver. Now put your hand back down, because we’re about to introduce you to someone who has set the bar much higher than you can ever dream of reaching.

Meet Greg Swift, a longtime driver for Schneider National Inc. who has driven 5 million miles without a preventable accident. The Green Bay, Wisconsin-based carrier boasts a notable safety record: More than 6,500 of its drivers have traveled at least 1 million safe driving miles with the company. Swift, however, stands out from that crowd, joining only two other drivers in Schneider’s nearly 90-year history in reaching the 5 million-mile mark.

Keep ReadingShow less
Young scientist looking at test tube

Battery Council International launches student scholarship program

Look around any distribution center and you’ll see dozens of devices powered by batteries. They range from large-scale cells in electric forklifts, to mid-size units in autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), to slim, palm-size batteries in barcode scanners and smartphones. Despite the ubiquity of these applications, there is more work to be done. That’s why a battery-industry group has launched an initiative it hopes will encourage the next generation of engineers to continue developing smaller, safer, more powerful industrial batteries.

Battery Council International (BCI) has established a charitable foundation to help support future leaders in the energy-storage industry. The foundation will initially focus on scholarship awards for the 2025–2026 school year. Those scholarships include the BCI Battery Chemistry and STEM Scholarship, which will distribute $5,000 to individuals studying electrochemistry, engineering, mathematics, or a related technical discipline that will support energy-storage applications.

Keep ReadingShow less
Hydrogen FCEV (fuel-cell-powered electric refuse vehicle)

Hydrogen fuel cells could soon power refuse-collection trucks

Logistics service providers looking to cut emissions from their transportation operations have largely focused on the switch from internal combustion engines to battery electric vehicles (BEVs). But some proponents say that hydrogen fuel cells are a better way to generate the electricity required to reach that goal. A new demonstration project now underway is designed to prove their point.

Hyzon, an Illinois-based provider of hydrogen fuel-cell systems, has teamed up with New Way Trucks, a manufacturer of refuse-truck bodies in Iowa, to create what they call North America’s first hydrogen fuel-cell-powered electric refuse vehicle (FCEV), otherwise known as an electric garbage truck.

Keep ReadingShow less
Taylor Swift

Taylor Swift’s songs influence demand patterns

Global supply chains have long had to weather disruptions triggered by sudden spikes in demand. Holiday gift shopping, big price discounts, and stocking up before major storms are just a few reasons for jumps in consumption. Now there’s another variable to consider: Taylor Swift.

Devoted fans of the pop megastar often wear outfits reflecting Swift’s own costumes or references to her songs when they attend concerts. Her influence is so notable that, according to London-based Dalston Mill Fabrics, the singer’s lyrics appear to drive spikes in demand for certain styles and fabrics.

Keep ReadingShow less