Office of Operations Freight Management and Operations

Freight Facts and Figures 2008

Table 2-2. Value of Shipments by Transportation Mode: 2002, 2007, and 2035

The value of freight moved on the U.S. transportation system is increasing faster than tons transported, even when calculated in 2002 prices.  The FAF 2007 provisional estimate and 2035 forecast expect the value of shipments to increase between 3.1 percent and 3.5 percent per year while tonnage is predicted to grow between 2.0 percent and 2.1 percent per year.

Table in Excel format

Billions of 2002 dollars

Empty cell. 2002 Total 2002 Domestic 2002 Exports3 2002 Imports3 2007 Total 2007 Domestic 2007 Exports3 2007 Imports3 2035 Total 2035 Domestic 2035 Exports3 2035 Imports3
Total 13,228 11,083 778 1,367 14,869 12,363 904 1,603 (R) 41,867 (R) 29,590 3,392 8,884
Truck 8,856 8,447 201 208 9,764 9,266 235 264 23,767 (R) 21,653 806 1,306
Rail 382 288 26 68 416 303 36 78 702 483 63 156
Water 103 76 13 13 51 37 8 7 151 103 31 18
Air, air & truck 771 162 269 340 1,022 235 354 434 5,925 721 1,548 3,655
Intermodal1 1,967 983 268 716 1,935 870 270 795 8,966 4,315 943 3,708
Pipeline and unknown2 1,149 1,127 1 22 1,680 1,652 1 26 2,357 2,315 1 41

Key: R = revised.

1Intermodal includes U.S. Postal Service and courier shipments and all intermodal combinations, except air and truck. Intermodal also includes oceangoing exports and imports that move between ports and interior domestic locations by modes other than water.

2Pipeline and unknown shipments are combined because data on region-to-region flows by pipeline are statistically uncertain.

3Data do not include imports and exports that pass through the United States from a foreign origin to a foreign destination by any mode.

Notes:

The 2007 data are provisional estimates, which are based on selected modal and economic trend data. Methods used to develop these estimates have improved over time, and as a consequence, previously released annual provisional estimates are superseded by the 2007 estimates in this table. Numbers may not add to totals due to rounding.

Sources:

2002 and 2035: U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Office of Freight Management and Operations, Freight Analysis Framework, version 2.2, 2007.

2007: U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Office of Freight Management and Operations, Freight Analysis Framework, 2007 provisional estimates, 2008.

 

 


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