Office of Operations Freight Management and Operations

1.0 INTRODUCTION

The Office of Freight Management and Operations of the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) is responsible for the development of the Freight Analysis Framework (FAF) including the commodity origin-destination (O-D) database. FAF integrates data from a variety of sources to estimate commodity flows and related freight transportation activity among states, regions, and major international gateways. The commodity origin destination (O-D) database contains commodity flows between domestic origins and destinations, exports between domestic origins and foreign destinations and the port of exit, and imports between foreign origins and domestic destinations via a port of entry. Each record contains zone of origin, zone of destination, port of entry or exit (which applies only to export and import flows), type of commodity, mode of transportation for domestic portions of the flow, value in millions of dollars, and tons in thousands of short ton.

The FAF commodity origin destination database lays the foundation for transportation infrastructure analysis. With regard to the first generation of the FAF, FHWA relied upon data provided by private and proprietary sources. However, this arrangement limited the data usage to United States Department of Transportation (USDOT) only. State DOTs and local metropolitan planning organizations (MPOs) do have access to the products from the usage of these data but not to the data itself.

To overcome the limitations of FAF's commodity data issue, FHWA recently developed the next generation of the FAF known as FAF2. The commodity O-D data used in developing FAF2 data are based on the 2002 Commodity Flow Survey (CFS) and a host of other public data sources. For data quality reasons, FAF2 freight flow O-D coverage is limited to 131 freight analysis zones that include 114 CFS freight O-D zones and 17 major ports, border crossings, and freight ports.

In an attempt to make the FAF into a useful tool for measuring and analyzing the changing world of freight transportation, FHWA intends to develop annual estimates of commodity movements including all modes of transportation starting with year 2005 and 2006. The goal is to provide practitioners in the area of economic development and transportation planning with the latest update – provisional data on goods movement. For example, the provisional estimate for calendar year 2006 is to be released by the end of February 2006; and the provisional estimate for 2007 is to be released by February 2007. The provisional estimates will be developed based on publicly available freight data sources and methods that can be fully disclosed to the general public.

This report presents a description of the public data sources and methodologies for extracting freight information from yearly, quarterly, and monthly publicly available publications for the current year or past years and to generate provisional estimates of freight movement by mode for the current year. State level summary tables of the provisional estimates of volume and value of commodity movements by mode are also presented in this report.

1.1 Report Organization

The remainder of the report is organized as follows:

Chapter 2 presents the data sources and methodology used in developing the provisional estimates for freight movement by highway (both domestic and international). International movements by land border crossings include import and export between the U.S. and Mexico, and between the U.S. and Canada via land border crossings.

Chapter 3 presents the data sources and methodology used in developing the provisional estimates for freight movement by air (both domestic and international). International movements by air include international air cargo covering both import and export.

Chapter 4 presents the data sources and methodology used in developing the provisional estimates for freight movement by rail (both domestic and international). International movements by rail include all rail shipments to and from Canada, Mexico, and countries outside North America that sue rail for the domestic portion of the movement.

Chapter 5 presents the data sources and methodology used in developing the provisional estimates for freight movement by water (both domestic and international). International movements by water include import and export between the U.S. and the other seven international trade regions via seaports.

Chapter 6 presents the data sources and methodology used in developing the provisional estimates for freight movement by pipeline.

Office of Operations