by Steven-Kenneth | Oct 2, 2022 | Other Stories, Rail
Amid broad relief that a crippling strike had been averted at the eleventh hour, US Class I railways moved to ramp up their operations again. For now, industrial action is off the cards, but it is not clear if labour groups may decide to call a strike owing to...
by Steven-Kenneth | Oct 2, 2022 | Ports and Terminals, Top Stories
Ensuring the movement of Canada’s trade in the face of exceptional supply chain and extreme weather disruptions has been a collaborative effort at the Port of Vancouver. Over the past year, the port workforce and wider port community have worked tirelessly to keep...
by Steven-Kenneth | Oct 2, 2022 | Alex Binkley, Featured
The traffic mix on the St. Lawrence Seaway and Great Lakes was long considered to be dominated by a staple regime of outbound grain and inbound iron ore. However, in recent years breakbulk and project cargo has shown steady growth as ports from Thunder Bay to...
by Steven-Kenneth | Oct 2, 2022 | Featured, Theo van de Kletersteeg
Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) is about to become a “big thing” for Canada’s West Coast, and, perhaps later, for Canada’s East Coast, with one B.C. export terminal being readied for operation in 2025. A new industry will soon be born in Canada. The question is: will more...
by Steven-Kenneth | Oct 2, 2022 | Brian Dunn, Featured
Whenever you walk into a federal government Canadian Corps of Commissionaires was formed in 1925 with the opening of offices in in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver. A national organization was created by 1950 and today Commissionaires employs over 23,000 people with...