Trucking still leads in surging transport of cross-border freight

October 4, 2017

Tyson Fisher

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The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Bureau of Transportation Statistics reports that in July trucks moved more than 63 percent of NAFTA freight – with trains, planes, ships and pipelines picking up the rest. All five modes experienced an increase in freight year to year for the third consecutive month.

The value of freight hauled across the borders decreased by nearly 11 percent compared with June, when freight was up 1.5 percent from the previous month. March had the largest month-to-month increase (16 percent) since March 2011, when NAFTA freight was up more than 22 percent compared to February 2011.

Compared to July 2016, freight was up 6.5 percent. This marks the ninth consecutive month of year-to-year increases. Nine of 12 months experienced a loss compared to the previous year in 2016.


July’s rise was only the fifth largest year-to-year increase this year, ahead of February (2.9 percent increase) and April (0.8 percent increase). In March, the index reached more than $100 billion for the first time since October 2014.

August, November and December were the only months to have a year-to-year increase in 2016 at 0.7 percent, 3.3 percent and 0.4 percent respectively. August was the first year-to-year increase since December 2014, when freight increased by more than 5 percent.

Trucks carried more than $56 billion of the $89.2 billion of imports and exports in July. Rail came in second with more than $13 billion.

Freight totaled $89.175 billion, down nearly $11 billion from the previous month but an increase of more than $5 billion from July 2016.

Pipeline freight accounted for the largest increase at 24 percent after an increase of 26.3 percent in June. Trucks accounted for a modest increase at 4 percent. In June, truck freight experienced a similar modest increase of 4.4 percent.

Nearly 58 percent of U.S.-Canada freight was moved by trucks, followed by rail at nearly 16 percent. U.S.-Mexico freight went up by more than 7 percent compared with July 2016. Of the $44.4 billion of freight moving in and out of Mexico, trucks carried nearly 70 percent of the loads.