Toronto Star

FULL STEAM AHEAD

Montreal-based company says facility at Prince Rupert, B.C., expanding faster than expected CN Rail upped capital expenditur­es by $200 million to reach $3.4 billion.

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CN Rail says it has been performing better than expected after last year’s harsh winter,

BOSTON— CN Rail says that its operations are performing better than it expected so far in the second quarter after a rough winter that led to the replacemen­t of its chief executive.

Chief financial officer Ghislain Houle told a transporta­tion conference on Tuesday that volumes are up 14 per cent in the first two weeks of May after falling 4 per cent in the first quarter.

Demand is strong for frac sand, lumber, Canadian grain and coal, he said.

The Montreal-based railway says its port facility at Prince Rupert, B.C., is expanding faster than expected and should hit capacity two years ahead of schedule.

Houle says the operating performanc­e will see a particular improvemen­t in the fourth quarter after significan­t investment­s in the railway network, especially in Western Canada.

CN Rail increased its capital expenditur­es by $200 million to reach $3.4 billion, is qualifying hundreds of new conductors and buying 200 locomotive­s over the next three years.

Two days after CN Rail dumped its CEO in March, his interim replacemen­t, Jean-Jacques Ruest, apologized for the railway’s poor performanc­e last winter and promised immediate action to clear the backlog of grain shipments.

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