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ATA data points to continued trucking growth


When it comes to data-driven facts in the freight transportation sector, it quickly becomes very difficult to see trucking as anything but a dominant mode.

That is not the opinion of your writer here; it has much more to do with the American Trucking Associations (ATA) ATA American Trucking Trends 2017, which ATA describes as the annual compendium about the trucking industry.

“The information in Trends highlights exactly what I tell elected officials, regulators and key decision-makers every day: trucking is literally the driving force behind our great economy,” said ATA President and CEO Chris Spear. “Safe, reliable and efficient motor carriers enable businesses throughout the supply chain to maintain lean inventories, thereby saving the economy billions of dollars each year.”

And is this compendium ever complete in outlining the sheer magnitude of the trucking sector, starting with trucking industry revenues for 2016, which ATA said came in at $676.2 billion, which equates into 79.8%, or basically four-fifths of total U.S. freight spend.

As lofty as that 2016 tally is, though, it pales somewhat compared to its preceding years, with 2015 trucking revenue at $726.4 billion and 2014 at $700.4 billion.

Other key trucking-related metrics in this year’s edition include:

  • Trucks moved 10.42 billion tons of freight – 70.6% of all domestic freight tonnage;
  • The nation’s commercial trucks paid $41.3 billion in state and federal highway userfees and taxes. The average five-axle tractor trailer pays more than $5,600 in taxes annually;
  • There were 33.8 million trucks registered for business purposes, including 3.68 million Class 8 trucks;
  • Those trucks burned 38.8 billion gallons of diesel fuel and 15.5 billion gallons of gasoline and traveled 450.4 billion miles;
  • 7.4 million Americans are employed in trucking-related jobs, including 3.5 million as truck drivers. 6% of those drivers are women and 38.7% are minorities; and
  • Trucking is an industry made up of small businesses: 91% of motor carriers operate six or fewer trucks and 97.3% operate less than 20

This year’s edition of American Trucking Trends was issued on the heels of the ATA Freight Transportation Forecast 2017, which was comprised of data from the ATA and IHS Global Insight.

Like the Trends report, numbers and figures issued in this publication painted a largely positive picture for freight transportation over all, including how freight volumes are projected to grow 2.8% in 2017, with 3.4% annual growth through 2023, followed by a 2.3% annual rate in subsequent years.  What’s more, the report is calling for 15.18 billion tons of freight to be moved by all modes in 2017, with the expectation that it will head up to 20.73 billion tons, an increase of 36.6% in 2028.

The 2.8% growth will be paced “by solid growth across all modes resulting from general economic growth as well as improved conditions in the manufacturing sector,” the report stated. 

Some other key data points in this report noted how trucking’s share of freight tonnage will decline from 70.6% in 2016 to 67.9% in 2023 to 67.1% in 2028, while its share of total revenue in absolute terms will fall from 79.8% in 2016 to 77.7% in 2028 while still increasing substantially more than other modes.

And it also observed that truckload volume will increase 2.7% per year from 2017-2023 and then by 2% per year through 2028, while LTL volume will increase 3.3% per year from 2017-2023 and then by 2.9% per year through 2028, with tonnage growing from 147.6 million in 2017 to 179.1 million in 2023 to 206.9 million in 2028.

This report made it clear that over the forecast period, capacity shortfalls will develop, with some selected tightness in freight handling capacity starting to emerge, suggesting that capacity expansion will be required if the modes are going to be able to handle anticipated growth.

ATA Chief Economist Bob Costello said that this report takes a bottom up approach, first with a general economic forecast that is then fed through a transportation model.

“It is not just looking at the modes and saying ‘this is by how much we think the modes will grow,’ especially when it comes to a modal shift,” he said. “There is no assumption that one mode will grow over another mode, because [of some specific factor like tightening truck or rail capacity]. There is none of that. It is assumed that all the modes will haul all the freight they are asked to….that is a big assumption, but it is a proper one as it is based on economic growth.”

And with that sentiment comes the ongoing, and ostensibly always correct thesis that economic growth drives freight transportation growth. Given the often slow pace of the lengthy economic recovery that tends to be overlooked at times even though it remains as true as ever. 


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About the Author

Jeff Berman's avatar
Jeff Berman
Jeff Berman is Group News Editor for Logistics Management, Modern Materials Handling, and Supply Chain Management Review and is a contributor to Robotics 24/7. Jeff works and lives in Cape Elizabeth, Maine, where he covers all aspects of the supply chain, logistics, freight transportation, and materials handling sectors on a daily basis.
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