AMLO issues federal mandate to force private railway companies to offer passenger service

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Mexico’s government issued a federal mandate this week forcing private railway companies operating in the country to offer passenger service over their normal daily freight runs.

Published in the Mexican government’s official gazette, Monday’s decree gives the country’s two main private concessionary rail operators — Canadian Pacific Kansas City (CPKC) and Ferromex — until Jan. 15 to present proposals for offering the passenger service themselves. If the two rail operators decline, the government will put Mexico’s army or navy in charge of lines designated for passenger services.

Mexico’s freight railway system is owned by the federal government and operated by CPKC and Ferromex under concessions from authorities.

“We made this decision because train travel will be more economical, comfortable, and less polluting, since the tracks can be electrified,” Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said during a news conference Monday. “It is safer public transportation and the mobility of the population from the main cities of Mexico to the northern border will increase.”

The decree orders the use of more than 10,000 private rail lines in Mexico that primarily carry freight to establish four short intercity passenger routes, along with three long passenger routes from central Mexico to Mexican cities along the U.S.-Mexico border.

The longer routes include passenger service from Mexico City to the border cities of Nuevo Laredo and Nogales, along with passenger service from Aguascalientes to the border city of Ciudad Juarez.

Officials for Calgary, Canada-based CPKC (NYSE: CP) in a news release said it is “reviewing the draft decree … regarding potential passenger rail service on certain existing freight rail corridors.”

In May, CPKC reached an agreement with the Mexican government to carry out a study of passenger trains from Mexico City to destinations across the country.

“As required by our concession, CPKC de Mexico will work closely with the Mexican federal government to evaluate passenger service on that corridor,” CPKC said in a statement. “The draft decree emphasizes that the public freight rail service will be respected and as such, we do not expect an adverse impact on our concession. CPKC has extensive experience hosting passenger rail services in multiple locations across its network in the U.S. and Canada while efficiently managing freight service.”

Source: El Financiero

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