Published: November 25th 2008
Source: CN
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CN disappointed in appeal court ruling sanctioning CTA grain rate reduction
CN today expressed disappointment in a Federal Court of Appeal of
Canada ruling that lets stand a Canadian Transportation Agency (CTA)
decision issued earlier this year to reduce rail revenue entitlement
for grain transportation retroactively under the Canada
Transportation Act.
The CTA in February 2008 cut grain rates by eight per cent under
railway revenue caps retroactive to Aug. 1, 2007, to reflect its
determination of actual railway maintenance expenditures for
government-owned grain hopper cars.
CN appealed the CTA decision, saying it was flawed and that its
retroactive application was illegal.
CN estimates the CTA decision will reduce its Canadian grain
revenues by C$23 million for the 2007/08 grain crop year. The ruling
transforms a business now generating slightly below average profits
into CN's least-profitable commodity group. It is especially
frustrating to CN that the rate reduction is retroactive: rates that
were set in the spring of 2008 are to be applied to grain that moved
in August of 2007.
"Rail rates for grain transport in Western Canada were already among
the lowest in the world, and we can see no sound policy reason to
lower them further," said E. Hunter Harrison, president and chief
executive officer of CN. "CN is not in a position to cross-subsidize
its grain movements with profits generated from the movement of
goods in other sectors of the Canadian economy. As a result, CN will
have to carefully review its future investments in grain-related
equipment and infrastructure."
CN - Canadian National Railway Company and its operating railway
subsidiaries - spans Canada and mid-America, from the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans to the Gulf of Mexico, serving the ports of
Vancouver, Prince Rupert, B.C., Montreal, Halifax, New Orleans, and
Mobile, Ala., and the key metropolitan areas of Toronto, Buffalo,
Chicago, Detroit, Duluth, Minn./Superior, Wis., Green Bay, Wis.,
Minneapolis/St. Paul, Memphis, and Jackson, Miss., with connections
to all points in North America. For more information on CN, visit
the company's website at www.cn.ca.

