Hazardous materials movement through the Nation's transportation network in 2007 remained relatively unchanged from 2002 measures, according to data from the 2007 Commodity Flow Survey (CFS), released in 2010. The estimated 2.2 billion tons of hazardous materials carried by all modes of transportation is about the same as the estimated tonnage from the prior CFS in 2002. However, the value of those shipments more than doubled, from $660 billion to $1,448 billion, driven primarily by the increase in the price of refined petroleum products and other basic commodities. Slightly more than half (54 percent) of hazardous material tonnage is moved via trucks over the Nation's highways. Pipeline is the next most used carrier of hazardous materials, handling 28 percent of the tonnage, while the other modes each accounted for 7 percent or less of total hazardous material tonnage.
The absence of legal definitions to describe waterborne passenger vessels, such as cruise ships and ferries, may pose a challenge for researchers atte...
Just over 40 percent of U.S. passenger ferry terminals offer connections to other scheduled public transportation modes. That makes ferries less conne...
Since at least 1991, federal transportation policy has sought to encourage intermodal connections – the links that allow passengers to switch from o...
During the last decade there has been a significant increase in the number of motorcycle sales and registrations in the United States. At the same tim...
Trade between the United States and East African countries (defined in this special report as Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda) has grown ...
Intermodal connections with other scheduled public transportation modes are available at 70 percent of all stations served by commuter rail trains. Co...
Federal safety agencies share a common problem—the need to target resources effectively to reduce risk. One way this targeting is commonly done is w...
2010-12-01 | National Census of Ferry Operators (NCFO)
Abstract:
In 2007, 190 ferry operators across the Nation provided service to an estimated 106 million passengers through nearly 500 terminals in 37 States and 3...
2008-08-01 | National Census of Ferry Operators (NCFO)
Abstract:
At the request of Congress, in 2006 the Bureau of Transportation Statistics, a branch of the U.S. Department of Transportation's Research and Innovati...
Freight Transportation between the United States and our North American Free Trade Agreement partners – Canada and Mexico – continues to grow at a...
Bridges are an integral part of the U.S. highway network, providing links across natural barriers, passage over railroads and highways, and freeway co...
Several snowstorms in the Northeast, Midwest, and Southeast during February 2010 disrupted air travel not only at airports blanketed with snow but at ...
Pirates prey upon targets of opportunity. Given optimal conditions (e.g., calm weather, slow cruising speed, and daylight4) relatively small, fast ves...
Domestic freight traffic carried by air, truck, rail, water, and pipeline totaled more than 4.5 trillion ton-miles in 2005—an increase of more than ...
The annual Omnibus Household Survey (OHS), administered by the U.S. Department of Transportation's Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS), asks res...
This BTS special report examines historical U.S. maritime trends, changes in U.S. trading partners, and current U.S. marine trade patterns. More speci...
Trade between the United States and its North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) partners—Canada and Mexico—has more than doubled in dollar val...
The TSI provides a monthly measure of freight and passenger service. Statistical and economic techniques are used to present the output of the differe...
Several high profile incidents have focused attention on "tarmac delays" that resulted in air travelers spending long periods of time aboard aircraft ...
More than 13 billion tons of freight, valued at $11.8 trillion, were transported nearly 3.5 trillion ton-miles in the United States during 2007, accor...
United States. Department of Transportation. Bureau of Transportation Statistics
1997-09-24 | Commodity Flow Survey (CFS)
Abstract:
The Standard Classification of Transported Goods (SCTG) has been created jointly by agencies of the United States (U.S.) and Canadian governments to a...
United States. Department of Commerce. Bureau of the Census
1997-01-14 | Commodity Flow Survey (CFS)
Abstract:
This manual provides the 5-digit Standard Classification of Transported Goods (SCTG) commodity codes that you will use to complete column '(f)' of the...
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