Office of Operations Freight Management and Operations

Freight Facts and Figures 2011

Table 2-2. Value of Shipments by Transportation Mode: 2007, 2010, and 20401

The value of freight moved is expected to increase faster than the weight, rising from $882 per ton in 2007 to $1,435 per ton in 2040 when controlling for inflation. Exports at $1,826 per ton and imports at $1,455 per ton are significantly higher than domestic shipments at $799 per ton in 2007. Exports and imports accounted for 11 percent of the tons and 19 percent of the value in 2007 and are forecast to make up an even greater share of freight moving throughout the United States in the future, reaching 16 percent of the tons and 25 percent of the value by 2040.

Table in Excel format

Billions of 2007 dollars

Empty cell. 2007 2010 2040
Total Domestic Exports2 Imports2 Total Domestic Exports2 Imports2 Total Domestic Exports2 Imports2
Total 16,651 13,457 1,196 1,997 16,065 13,032 1,217 1,816 39,441 29,578 4,195 5,668
Truck 10,780 10,225 267 287 10,515 10,000 263 252 21,762 20,234 728 799
Rail 512 374 45 93 427 306 41 79 740 480 118 142
Water 339 158 14 167 343 146 15 182 448 171 32 245
Air, air & truck 1,077 151 422 505 999 123 409 466 4,350 732 1,683 1,936
Multiple modes & mail 2,879 1,639 396 844 2,739 1,562 434 743 10,322 6,538 1,473 2,310
Pipeline 723 658 4 61 719 655 6 58 866 735 9 122
Other & unknown 341 252 48 41 323 240 48 35 953 688 151 114

1Many 2007 and 2040 numbers in this table were revised as a result of Freight Analysis Framework (FAF) database improvements in FAF version 3.2.

2Data do not include imports and exports that pass through the United States from a foreign origin to a foreign destination by any mode.

Notes:

Numbers may not add to totals due to rounding. The 2010 data are provisional estimates, which are based on selected modal and economic trend data. All truck, rail, water, and pipeline movements that involve more than one mode, including exports and imports that change mode at international gateways, are included in multiple modes & mail to avoid double counting. As a consequence, rail and water totals in this table are less than other published sources.

Source:

U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Office of Freight Management and Operations, Freight Analysis Framework, version 3.2, 2011.

 


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