BNSF plans $1.5B inland intermodal hub to ease port congestion
BNSF plans $1.5B inland intermodal hub to ease port congestion
Abstract
Dive Brief: BNSF will invest more than $1.5 billion to build an intermodal complex in California's High Desert, the railroad announced Saturday, saying the project will help ease congestion near the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. The complex, about 130 miles from Long Beach, will ultimately help the railroad move containers faster out of ports, President and CEO Katie Farmer said in a release. A private investment firm received the green light from local officials in August to move forward with a port facility located in the middle of the Mojave Desert, which it said would act as a "Relief valve" for congestion in Los Angeles and Long Beach. The Port of Long Beach and the Utah Inland Port Authority also teamed up with Union Pacific to move freight via rail to Salt Lake City in a bid to reduce truck traffic. Processing westbound freight at the facility will allow BNSF to "More efficiently bring trains to the ports and other California terminals," according to the release. The executive directors of the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach each expressed their support for the project. "BNSF's planned Barstow International Gateway will improve cargo velocity through our port and reduce truck traffic on our freeways," Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka said in a statement.