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Railroad Fuel Efficiency Sets New Record

    Baltimore to Boston on One Gallon of Diesel Fuel

    WASHINGTON, May 21 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- What's more fuel
efficient than the newest hybrid car? A freight train.



    And last year, freight railroads were more fuel efficient than ever.

    In 2007, major freight railroads in the United States moved a ton of
freight an average of 436 miles on each gallon of fuel. This represents a
3.1 percent improvement over 2006 and an astonishing 85.5 percent
improvement since 1980.

    "That's the equivalent of moving a ton of freight all the way from
Baltimore to Boston on just a single gallon of diesel fuel," said
Association of American Railroads President and CEO Edward R. Hamberger.

    He noted that thanks to railroads' fuel efficiency gains, since 1980
freight railroads have reduced fuel consumption by 48 billion gallons and
carbon dioxide emissions by 538 million tons.

    Hamberger pointed out that railroads are three or more times more fuel
efficient than trucks, adding: "In fact, if just 10 percent of the freight
currently moving by truck went instead by rail, the nation could save one
billion gallons of fuel per year."

    Moving more freight by rail does more than just reduce fuel consumption
and pollution, he said. It also reduces highway congestion. "A single
intermodal train can take 280 trucks off the highways. And because the
average size of a truck is equal to almost four automobiles, that's the
same amount of space that 1,100 automobiles would occupy."

    Railroads are taking concrete steps to further reduce fuel consumption
and emissions.

    "Railroads and their suppliers have developed technologies that reduce
the need to idle locomotives when not operating," said Hamberger. "They
have developed new hybrid and "gen-set" locomotives that also reduce both
fuel consumption and emissions in rail yards. And they are working to
develop new hybrid locomotives and fuel cell locomotives that have promise
to bring further improvements in both areas."



SOURCE Association of American Railroads




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    CONTACT:
    Tom White of the Association of American
    Railroads, +1-202-639-2556