Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Freight Data - A Transportation Perspective September 2010 Michael Sprung – FHWA, Office of Freight Management and Operations.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Freight Data - A Transportation Perspective September 2010 Michael Sprung – FHWA, Office of Freight Management and Operations."— Presentation transcript:

1 Freight Data - A Transportation Perspective September 2010 Michael Sprung – FHWA, Office of Freight Management and Operations

2 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Truck Transportation (NAICS 484) – Est. Revenue for Employer Firms: 2008 NAICS code Kind of business 2008 (millions of dollars) Selected transportation and warehousing industries 1 332,394 484Truck transportation233,786 4841 General freight trucking156,196 48411 General freight trucking, local26,218 48412 General freight trucking, long-distance129,978 484121 General freight trucking, long-distance, truckload96,120 484122 General freight trucking, long-distance, less than truckload33,858 4842 Specialized freight trucking77,590 48421 Used household and office goods moving14,803 48422 Specialized freight (except used goods) trucking, local33,673 48423 Specialized freight (except used goods) trucking, long-distance29,114 Source: U.S Census Bureau. 2008 Service Annual Survey and administrative data, accessed September 2010.

3 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation To inform policy and investment, we need to understand How does freight movement affect congestion, infrastructure wear, freight carriers, safety, and the environment? How does congestion, expected and unexpected delay, and cost affect freight movement? How does the economy adjust in productivity, shifting activity among regions, and global competitiveness? How will policies and investments affect freight movement and its consequences?

4 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation An Understanding of Freight Transportation How much & what freight moves from place to place?  Weight  Value  Commodity Where & how is freight moving?  Origin & destination  Route used  Mode of transportation When is freight carried?  Season  Time of day

5 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation FHWA Freight Transportation Data Freight Analysis Framework (FAF):  A database of regional freight flows by tons and value for all modes, with 30-year forecasts, and annual provisional updates  An assignment of average number of trucks to individual highway segments on the national network Freight Performance Measures (FPM) Program  500,000 + trucks and trailers  Travel time and travel time reliability for 25 Interstate Highways  Crossing time and crossing time reliability at major border crossings

6 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation FAF3 Details Value & weight for all domestic, export, & import shipments 7 Domestic modes (truck, rail, water, air, multiple modes & mail, pipeline, and other & unknown) 7 Foreign modes (same as domestic modes) 123 Domestic regions 8 International regions (Canada, Mexico, & 6 groupings of countries based on UN definitions) 43 Commodity classes (2-digit SCTG codes)

7 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation FAF3 Regions South, Central & Western Asia Eastern Asia Canada Mexico Rest of Americas Europe South-Eastern Asia And Oceana Africa

8 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Trucks on the Network

9 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation FAF3 Tons and Value by Mode: 2007 Tons (thousands) Value ($ millions) Truck 13,083,855 11,690,942 Rail 2,040,961 588,332 Water 838,811 303,687 Air (include truck-air) 12,769 1,079,037 Multiple modes & mail 637,265 1,855,447 Pipeline 1,592,790 782,965 Other and unknown 295,016 371,788 Total, All Modes18,501,46616,672,198

10 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation International Trade as a Share of Tons and Value by Domestic Mode Share of TonsShare of Value Truck 6.7%12.6% Rail14.5%36.5% Water52.4%61.4% Air (include truck-air)79.0%85.9% Multiple modes & mail18.5%9.5% Pipeline21.0%20.5% Other and unknown14.9%32.5% Total, All Modes11.4%19.6%

11 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Major FAF3 Data Sources Commodity Flow Survey (CFS) TransBorder Freight Data Foreign Trade Statistics Waterborne Commerce Statistics Port Import/Export Reporting Service (PIERS) Vehicle Inventory and Use Survey Highway Performance Monitoring System National Transportation Atlas Database Transportation Satellite Accounts

12 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Data Gaps Domestic-leg of international trade flows  True origin of exports  True destination of imports Transshipments  Trade between two foreign countries using the U.S. transportation system (ports, highways, borders, etc.)  Some progress made in this area with Canadian and Mexican transshipments from foreign trade data.

13 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation FAF Summary FAF provides a comprehensive national picture of freight flows and baseline forecasts to support policy studies FAF shows states and regions who their major trading partners are with the volumes and sources of through traffic at a corridor level Local specific analysis requires supplemental data collection to provide local detail

14 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Freight Performance Measures Program Approximately 500,000 probe vehicles  340,000,000 truck positions (e.g. telemetry points) monthly  over 4,000,000,000 positions annually Partnership between FHWA and ATRI with a cooperative data governance model  FHWA sets general contractual guidelines on key business areas and management decisions it intends to use the data for  Congestion and Bottleneck Identification  Understanding Freight System Performance  FHWA and ATRI monitor requests for data and determine cooperatively who should have access to data and at what level of aggregation

15 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Freight System Performance

16 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Measuring Border Crossing Delay A Trip origin Diversion option to alternate crossing Final approach to border crossing (beyond the end of queue) End of queue Canada U.S. Stop bar Arrival at primary inspection B Border C D E F G H I Exit primary inspection Exit secondary inspection Trip Destination

17 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation ‘Ideally’ Data Would Be: Timely Accurate Relevant Complete Obtainable Clear Consistent Harmonized Affordable

18 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Freight Data Challenges Definitions of freight transportation terms are not always harmonized:  Commodity Classifications  Mode Definitions ‘Available data’ must often be used as a proxy for ‘Needed data’  Trade (flow of $) used in lieu of international freight flows  Value-to-weight ratios used where $ or tonnage data are incomplete Lack of authoritative data sources and management agencies  Issues with comparability and quality when data must be sought from many different transportation and trade data collection efforts

19 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation We rely on customer feedback Do the estimates we publish align with other sources you use? What would make existing freight data resources more usable? What are the major freight issues you and your partners are trying to address?

20 Federal Highway Administration U.S. Department of Transportation Thank You! Without Data It’s Just An Opinion. DOT Freight Website: http://www.freight.dot.gov/


Download ppt "Freight Data - A Transportation Perspective September 2010 Michael Sprung – FHWA, Office of Freight Management and Operations."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google