Stakeholders mixed on new rail inspection technology rule
Railroads and union disagree over Federal Railroad Administration final rule enabling use of continuous rail inspection technology.
Railroads and union disagree over Federal Railroad Administration final rule enabling use of continuous rail inspection technology.
Wabtec’s former chief technology officer departs for CN; Wabtec appoints a new leader to the role.
Technology’s footprint in CSX’s operational, sustainability and safety practices was readily apparent, according to the company’s 2019 environmental, social and governance report.
The Federal Railroad Administration and Volpe are in the middle of conducting a survey on how railroaders gather and share information about occupational safety.
The pandemic is exacerbating existing problems with vendors and software installation, according to a federal report.
A report from Boston Consulting Group suggests that the Class I railroads must look beyond precision scheduled railroading and operating ratios if the industry wants to be a competitive transportation mode.
The partnership will produce remote tools that will enable railcar owners and operators to know where their cars are and what is their mileage and cargo capacity.
The railroad installed its first-ever train inspection portal southeast of its largest hump yard in Georgia last December.
The autonomous track inspection technology is mounted on a locomotive, allowing NS to inspect rail track in real time.
“If a shipper can share some of its production forecast information to railroads, railroads can plan better to meet that capacity. Conversely, if railroads can open up and show where their empty railcars are to the shipper so that the shipper has a bit more confidence that the right number of railcars are going to show up, then the shipper can more confidently choose rail.”