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BOX 1-C
Measuring the
Nation's Freight Movements
Accurately
measuring the magnitude of freight movement is a challenge. No single data
source provides complete and timely information on all freight transportation
modes for all goods and sectors of the economy. The most comprehensive national
picture of freight movement comes from the Commodity Flow Survey (CFS) produced
most recently in 1993, 1997, and 2002 by the Bureau of Transportation
Statistics (BTS) and the U.S. Census Bureau. As a shipper-based survey, the CFS
collects information on how
U.S.
establishments transport
raw materials and finished goods; the types of commodities shipped by mode of
transportation; the value, weight, origin, and destination of shipments; and
the distance shipped. (By contrast, a carrier-based survey would provide
information on shipment route, cost, and time of travel.)
Despite
the comprehensive nature of the CFS, important data gaps exist in its coverage
of certain industries and commodities and in the domestic movement of imports.
BTS estimated that the 2002 CFS covered about 81 percent of the shipment value,
73 percent of the tonnage, and 71 percent of the ton-miles of total
U.S.
freight movements. To
improve the data, BTS made supplemental estimates for farm shipments to
processing plants, crude petroleum pipeline shipments, waterborne imports and
exports, and imports by surface and air. These supplemental estimates were made
for the 1993, 1997, and 2002 CFS. For the 2002 CFS, BTS also filled gaps in
shipments of logs and lumber.
Some
major differences arise when CFS totals are compared with the supplemental
data, especially in relative modal combinations, average shipment distance, and
commodity mix. For example, CFS shipments were valued at $733 per ton compared
with $470 per ton of shipments in the supplemental data, which has a lower
value because it provides better coverage of crude oil and petroleum products. A ton of CFS
shipments, on average, traveled about 270 miles, slightly less than the
approximate 300 miles for the shipments in the supplemental data, in part
because CFS includes large bulk shipments (e.g., sand and gravel), which are
mostly local shipments.
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