SO anybody else think 80 locomotives and 7000 new oil cars may cause an issue or two with getting our grain to market in a couple years, likely going to replace the oil price differential with a grain price differential.
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Originally posted by mcfarms View PostSO anybody else think 80 locomotives and 7000 new oil cars may cause an issue or two with getting our grain to market in a couple years, likely going to replace the oil price differential with a grain price differential.
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My gut feeling is that this whole plan will flounder for some reason or another, as government 'entrepreneurial' plans often do. Maybe Alberta oil will turn back up, then for whatever reason we don't need these cars anymore and they get sold at a deep discount and we take a loss on the whole thing.
Re: disruption to grain movent, one guy on CBC today was saying it should not be an issue because the oil will be traveling south, while grain goes east or west.
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Only at CBC, would they think more oil traveling south, would help the price differential. CBC just wants to comfort it's leftist viewers that somehow, the oil tanker cars won't be traveling through a city near them. For goodness sakes, an NDP premier wouldn't endanger those Canadians living in a large city now would they! ??? lol
If the plan comes to fruition as is, there's bound to be congestion. Remember last time, railways made more money from shipping a car of oil, than a car of grain. So especially if governments are going to own the oil tank cars, grain will be second fiddle.
Maybe now's an opportunity to talk about more rail line to the west coast?
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That was my question also bucket, at least going west, and if they are railing oil east, are they just planning to send it south from there. Would it be feasible to follow the grain route to Thunderbay, put it on our new ,rusty grain vessels and then offload to ocean vessels at other end.
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Originally posted by Marusko View PostRe: disruption to grain movent, one guy on CBC today was saying it should not be an issue because the oil will be traveling south, while grain goes east or west.
I wouldn’t be surprised this oil all goes to the west coast and will be competing for the railway bottlenecks with our wheat and canola when it’s -10C and CP/CN are using their annual weather excuses.
Oddly enough Nutjob wasn’t in support of the Northern Gateway pipeline that would have helped solve the glut of oil issue.
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Originally posted by mcfarms View PostSO anybody else think 80 locomotives and 7000 new oil cars may cause an issue or two with getting our grain to market in a couple years, likely going to replace the oil price differential with a grain price differential.
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