There will be business lost to AV’s, yes, but it won’t be 100%. If speed is that important, the cargo is probably on the highway even at today’s prices.
- Paul
Exactly right.
But even now, the rail schedules are pretty good. Our business is very schedule sensitive (construction) and I already use rail Toronto to Vancouver, to ship full containers. It has four or six day transit depending in the service. Price is better than road, and the logistics support is best in class. Much better than all these useless truck brokers.
The schedule advantage on trucks is also vastly exaggerated. Just last Friday we loaded a trailer that broke down in our yard. On Monday, the truck was still there with the driver. If that trailer had a container, it would have been halfway across the continent, no matter what. But these brokers now have no urgency on schedule at all. The railways (and their partners) take this much more seriously in my opinion.
The variability due to road congestion, weather,etc is also basic completely eliminated, which is always a huge pain in the ass when shipping transcontinental. Even with AVs, roads can be blocked by snow and ice.
Last year, I shipped a job (a few hundred containers) Toronto to Vancouver by rail, transload to Seattle, coordinated with an schedule crane to offload, and every truck was on time. Not a single call from site about late loads. In my experience, that would never happen with 100% road shipping. Especially in winter. In those scenarios, the calls and issues are basically weekly things.
I also import a lot of materials from Europe, which usually comes through Montreal. 2 day transit. Big deal. Price is competitive and generally reliable transit. This past year was bad because of the strikes , though.
More companies could ship by rail. I think a lot of it comes down to institutional blind spots. Even at my company they had never even thought of it before, and now it works great.