Tony Hatch is an independent transportation analyst
and consultant, and a program consultant for
Progressive Railroading's RailTrends® conference.
Email him at abh18@mindspring.com.
RailTrends: Presenting the links between the turrets
Progressive Railroading and I designed RailTrends lo these many years ago to solve a problem — our
ancient railway industry was filled with data and
filled with meetings to share that data (as well provide opportunities
to network).
But due in part to its very age, the rail industry, in some
ways, had ossified into a series of job- or segment-specific
silos ... and so had its conferences; perhaps a turret is an
even better metaphor. If you specialized on the equity side
as an analyst, you had a series (a tidal wave) of conferences
to attend led by CFOs with updates on carriers' recent
financial performance. If you were in operations, you had a
choice by specialty (AREMA, RSI, RSSI, REMSA, Railway
Interchange, RTA, etc. — all of which I attend, by the way).
There are insurance meetings. Legal conferences. Union
conventions. Shipper meetings. All of these are vital in
their own way, offering technology updates and passing on
specific knowledge for a chosen career field.
I have been to many (most?) and learned at all of them.
But none of them link together the turrets into the industry
castle, with the obvious example of financial return expectations
and the enormous capex programs of recent years,
by linking the ROIC of the equity world with the MOW
of the engineering world, and so on. It's something I try
to do in my speeches to these groups, but in a bigger way,
RailTrends aims to present the links between the turrets —
the players you don't see when you spend time with CFOs
or COOs alone. And I think RailTrends 2016 exemplifies our
founding spirit of eclecticism, discovery and cross-discipline
thematic discovery as well as any event in our history.
A tradition unlike any other
Of course, there are some givens at RailTrends — a D.C.
(and Ottawa) update with the stars of the trade association
world (Hamberger, Casey, Darr, Bourque, Simpson and
Baker of the AAR, IANA, ASLRRA, RAC, RSI and NRC,
respectively). We are lucky to have STB Chairman Dan
Elliott and Federal Railroad Administrator Sarah Feinberg,
too, guaranteeing what should be a lively debate. And we'll
cover rail cars, of course, with Dick Kloster of AllTranstek/
FTR. We have our analyst panel, with the bear (Avondale's
Donald Broughton) looking smarter
than the bull (er, me) — at least on paper.
We'll see what happens "live."
RailTrends 2016
exemplifies our
founding spirit of
eclecticism, discovery
and cross-discipline
thematic discovery as
well as any event in
our history.
Then there's the new stuff. We are so
excited to have as our shipper commentator
John Barrett, the GM/Supply Chain
of Chevron Phillips Chemical — at the
heart of the coming boom, which we
cover from all angles: Beth Whited of
Union Pacific Railroad, the largest chemicals transporter,
also will present. Oliver Wyman's Rod Case will discuss the
digital transformation in a data-driven industry and age,
supplemented by PTC.
The meat of our lineup is and always will be the
railroads themselves. In addition to ASLRRA's Darr, short
lines this year will be well represented by Watco CEO Rick
Webb. From the regional realm, Conrail's Ron Batory will
tell his railroad's story — surviving and thriving as an
open-access carrier for 20-plus years after the NS-CSX split
— and Florida East Coast Railway CEO Jim Hertwig will
talk about what it takes to be a successful short-haul intermodal
player in the Sunshine
State. Also joining us will be
Australia's largest carrier,
Aurizon, whose esteemed
CEO Lance Hockridge will
discuss productivity improvements
post-liberation from
government ownership.
And then there are the
Class Is: In addition to UP's
Whited, representatives from
KCS, CSX, NS and CN will
take their turns at the lectern.
KCS CEO Pat Ottensmeyer —
a regular RailTrends participant
— will discuss the coming improvements in Mexican
business. We also have two critical members of the new
teams at CSX (Dean Piacente) and Norfolk Southern
(RailTrends vet Mike McClellan), who will be critical to
their carrier's success rate in the post-coal world by running
intermodal and merchandise, respectively, at their railways.
Finally, the 2016 Railroad Innovator of the Year: CN's
CEO-emeritus Claude Mongeau. He's kept CN on course as
the industry leader in cost control, continuing the legacy of
his predecessor (also an Innovator of the Year winner). He's
also got his railroad reaching for and moving toward, as he
likes to say, "the next level." For that, Mongeau will be the
lasting story of what should be a great, eclectic, silo-busting,
castle-building RailTrends 2016!
RailTrends 2016 will be held November 17 and 18 at the W Hotel in New York.
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