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Mexico Transportation Costs
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2022-07-14T15:55:07.000ZThis data contains the costs of transporting grain to Mexico by truck, barge or rail, and ocean vessels to Mexico by water route, and by truck and rail by the land route. It includes the total transportation and landed costs.
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Downbound Barge Grain Movements (Tons)
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-23T16:30:42.000ZThe Mississippi River (north of St. Louis, MO) and its tributaries (e.g., the Arkansas River, Illinois River, Ohio River, etc.) make use of a series of locks and dams to bring traffic up and down the waterways. Grain generally flows south from the relatively production-rich areas of the Midwest to export ports in Louisiana and feed markets in the southeast. This dataset provides weekly information on the amount (in tons), location, and commodity of barged grain transiting the following three major points: (1) the last lock on the Mississippi, Mississippi Locks 27 (called "Miss Locks 27" in the dataset), which captures downbound traffic from the Upper Mississippi and Missouri Rivers; (2) the last lock on the Ohio River, Olmsted Locks and Dam (called "Ohio Olmstead" in the dataset), which captures any downbound traffic on the Ohio and Tennessee Rivers; and (3) the last lock on the Arkansas River, Arkansas River Lock and Dam 1 (called "Ark Lock 1" in the dataset). Ohio Olmsted locks replaced Ohio Locks 52 beginning in November 2018. Commodities include "corn," "soybeans," "wheat," and "other" (oats, barley, sorghum, and rye). Combined, these three locks give a sense of barge grain traffic (by commodity) on the Mississippi--since grain shipments heading south from the Upper Mississippi River, Illinois River, Ohio River, and Arkansas River are captured. Note, however, that this data does not include all grain barge movements on the Mississippi Rover System, as some grain originates on the Mississippi below the locking portion (south of St. Louis, MO). Grain traffic originating below Lock 27 on the Mississippi is about 10 to 30 percent of total downbound grain shipments, which varies year to year. A similar dataset, "Upbound and Downbound Loaded and Empty Barge Movements (Count)," contains information on the count of grain barges moving down the locking system (https://agtransport.usda.gov/d/w6ip-grsn) versus this dataset that shows tonnages. Data is collected weekly from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Lock Performance Monitoring System.
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Transportation and Landed Costs of Brazilian Soybeans to China and Germany
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-13T14:46:10.000ZThis dataset contains transportation and landed costs of Brazilian soybeans to Shanghai, China and Hamburg, Germany. Transportation costs are broken out by mode and vary by route. The data also contains Brazil farm values to compute total landed costs.
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Grain Transportation Cost Indicators
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-23T16:30:32.000ZThis data shows the weekly cost indices of transporting grain by each mode: truck, rail, barge, and ocean-going vessels. The base of each index (set to 100) is the average of monthly costs in the year 2000. For truck, the base rate is $1.49 per gallon. For unit train, the base rate is $1,815.15 per railcar, including the tariff and fuel surcharges (weekly changes reflect the month tariff rate plus fuel surcharge, and weekly secondary railcar market bids). For shuttle train, the base rate is $2,338.28 per railcar, including the tariff and fuel surcharges (weekly changes reflect the month tariff rate plus fuel surcharge, and weekly secondary railcar market bids). For barge, the base rate is 180 and is based on Illinois River barge rates (see Downbound Grain Barge Rates dataset for more information). For the Gulf-to-Japan ocean route, the base rate is $22.36/metric ton. For the Pacific Northwest-to-Japan ocean route, the base rate is $14.10/metric ton.
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U.S. vs Brazil Soybean Transportation Costs
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-04-11T14:05:50.000ZThe data shows the transportation cost of shipping soybeans from select U.S. and Brazil origins to China
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Ohio River Monthly Grain Barge Movements by Locks
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-02T17:10:47.000ZThis chart shows Ohio River monthly grain barge movement by commodity. Lock 42 data is available from February 2021. Use filters to select commodity, lock, direction of traffic, date range, or to specify the year and month.
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Ohio River Monthly Fertilizer Movements by Locks
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-02T17:10:47.000ZThis chart shows Ohio River monthly fertilizer movements by locks. Lock 42 data is available from February 2021. Use filters to change date range, direction of traffic, lock, or to specify the year and month.
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Ohio River Monthly Grain Barge Movements by Commodity
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-02T17:10:47.000ZThis chart shows Ohio River monthly grain barge movement by locks. Lock 42 data is available from February 2021. Use filters to select commodity, lock, direction of traffic, date range, or to specify the year and month.
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Ohio River Monthly Empty Barges
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2024-05-02T17:10:47.000ZThis chart shows Ohio River monthly empty barge movements. Lock 42 data is available from February 2021. Use filters to change date range, direction of traffic, lock, or to specify the year and month.
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Idle Container Vessel Fleet
internal.agtransport.usda.gov | Last Updated 2022-04-13T19:20:58.000ZThis dataset provides the monthly percentage of the global container vessel fleet that is idle. Ocean carriers remove and reinstate vessels from service as demand rises and falls throughout the year.