Home » Federal regulators say five of seven U.S. Class I railroads were ‘revenue adequate’ in 2022

Federal regulators say five of seven U.S. Class I railroads were ‘revenue adequate’ in 2022

By Bill Stephens | September 5, 2023

Only Kansas City Southern and CN’s GTW didn’t make the cut

WASHINGTON — Five of the seven Class I railroads operating in the U.S. last year were revenue adequate in 2022, the Surface Transportation Board said today.

Being revenue adequate means a railroads achieved a rate of return equal to or greater than the board’s calculation of the average cost of capital to the freight rail industry. The average cost of capital was 10.58% last year, the STB concluded.

BNSF Railway, CSX Transportation, Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific, and Soo Line — Canadian Pacific’s U.S. subsidiary — were all deemed revenue adequate.

That list left just Kansas City Southern and Grand Trunk Western, CN’s U.S. subsidiary, short of the revenue adequacy mark.

STB
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