CN to shorten trains during ‘extreme cold’ snap

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: January 17, 2012

, ,

Expected "extreme cold weather conditions" over the next five or six days may cut into transit times for goods moving on Canadian National Railway (CN) track.

In an advisory to shippers on Monday, CN listed specific corridors that could be affected including track from Winnipeg to Edmonton; from Toronto to Winnipeg via Thunder Bay, Ont.; from Winnipeg south to Superior, Wis.; and from Jasper, Alta. to Prince George, B.C.

"Transit times may be affected for certain customer shipments moving along the rail corridors listed above," Montreal-based CN said Monday.

Read Also

Photo: Greg Berg

EU crop monitor sees lower soft wheat and rapeseed yields in 2026

Crop monitoring service MARS said on Monday it expects the European Union’s average soft wheat yield to reach 5.98 tonnes per hectare this year, five per cent lower than in 2025.

Extreme cold has an adverse effect on train braking systems, the company said, and for safety reasons its trains would thus run at reduced lengths in order to maintain brake line pressure.

CN rail traffic patterns "remain close to seasonal norms at present," the company said Monday.

Relative to the unseasonably warm temperatures seen there so far this month, Environment Canada on Monday evening forecast colder temperatures in Winnipeg over the next few days, with daily highs only reaching -19 to -24 C between Tuesday and Friday.

At Jasper, Tuesday’s high and low temperatures were forecast Monday evening at -28 and -37 C respectively.

explore

Stories from our other publications