>> South America Trade Briefing The third in the series of trade briefings from MDS Transmodal - the South America Trade Briefing -presents analysis of containerised trade data to 4Q 2009 and forecasts for the next two years using the MDS Transmodal World Cargo Database.

>> North America Trade Briefing The second in the series of trade briefings from MDS Transmodal - the North America Trade Briefing -presents analysis of containerised trade data to 4Q 2009 and forecasts for the next two years using the MDS Transmodal World Cargo Database.

>> China Trade Briefing 2010  The latest China Trade Briefing report from MDS Transmodal highlights key trends in China's containerised import and export trades with near term quarterly predictions for 2010 and 2011.  Although the last 18 months have seen the container markets fall in spectacular fashion, still the words "double-digit growth" have not left the shipping industry's parlance as far as China is concerned.  The China Trade Briefing report shows why.  As well as looking at broad trends in imports and exports the report provides specific details on China's container trades with trading partners and particular commodity groups, drilling down to SITC 5 digit level in some cases.

>>Container Capacity Forecasts, 2nd quarter 2010 for main east/west routes now available; showing anticipated deployment of exisiting and newbuild vessels to 2011 and consequent capacity by trade lane. More...

>>Consolidated UK International Passenger database, available for 2009, describing passenger volumes by mode, route, origin/destination, journey purpose, length of stay and purpose, compatible with IPS, ferry operator and CAA sources. More...

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Rail freight forecasts

Both passenger and freight traffic is expanding so rail capacity is becoming increasingly scarce, particularly at certain bottlenecks.There are various significant independent factors likely to encourage the growth of rail freight over the coming years: 

  • An increasing reliance on imported goods - particularly through the major container ports (all with rail terminals). 
  • The difficulty in gaining planning consent for new warehouse sites without including a rail connection. 
  • Higher long term fuel prices:  fuel costs are a greater proportion of overall costs for HGVs than they are for trains.

The other significant likely change in railfreight movements is coal:  various pits and power stations are due to close while some coal ports have recently expanded their capacity. There is a need for these factors to be taken into account, along with the specific locations of likely port and rail-connected warehousing developments, and coal pit, port and power stations changes to produce forecasts of numbers of freight trains, line by line. 

MDS Transmodal in conjunction with the Rail Freight Group and the Freight Transport Association produce such forecasts.  These line-by-line forecasts enable the railway industry to plan for the future with correctly targeted improvements to the network.  Our latest forecasts were made in November 2007 and are shown below: 

They highlight particular locations likely to suffer from significant capacity shortfalls unless infrastructure improvements are made e.g.: 

  • Great Eastern Main Line (between London and Ipswich) near London where the building of Shellhaven container port (North Thames - with huge associated warehouses) along with expansion at Felixstowe and Bathside Bay (Harwich) container ports will generate many extra trains.  This is on the same railway lines as the proposed Crossrail trains. 
  • West Coast Main Line north of Crewe.  The mainly 4-track railway reduces to 2 tracks for a section north of Crewe.  The building of several proposed major warehousing sites in the North West and Scotland, along with container port expansion at Liverpool will generate many more trains.