10 Things to Know About the Trucking Industry

April 22, 2013
  1. In 2012, intermodal container volumes rose by 5.9 percent over the previous year with 13.1 million moves, according to the Intermodal Association of North America’s “Intermodal Market Trends & Statistics” report. That number surpassed the previous benchmark year of 2007 by 9.8 percent.
  2. Seasonally adjusted for-hire truck tonnage increased 2.9 percent in January 2013 – up 6.5 percent over the same period last year – after jumping 2.4 percent in December 2012, the American Trucking Associations reported. From November 2012 through January 2013, tonnage increased 9.1 percent.
  3. Run-off-road, rear-end and lane change maneuvers account for 23 percent, 28 percent and 9 percent of highway accidents, respectively, according to the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration.
  4. In 2010, nearly 12.5 billion tons of freight with a value of approximately $10.5 billion moved by truck in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. Those figures are expected to grow to around 18.5 billion tons valued at $21.7 billion in the year 2040.
  5. Transportation insurance brokers, wholesalers and underwriters responding to a survey conducted by NIP Group said insurance premiums for the trucking segment increased in the fourth quarter of 2012. Of those participants in NIP’s Transportation Insurance Pricing Survey (TIPS), 66 percent said they believe premiums had increased by as much as 10 percent in Q4 2012.
  6. Among the participants in the TIPS survey conducted by the NIP Group, 53.2 percent said insurance premiums for the intermodal trucking segment increased between 1 percent and 10 percent in the fourth quarter of 2012.
  7. Class 8 truck, those with gross weights of 33,001 pounds or more, net orders for March 2013 came in at 21,817 units, representing an 11 percent increase compared with same month in the previous year, according to Bloomington, Ind.-based FTR Associates.
  8. In 2012, there were 793,470 drivers of heavy and tractor-trailer trucks employed in the United States, according to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. Annually, the median wage in 2012 was $39,620, and the mean wage was $41,190.
  9. Fuel and driver wages (excluding benefits) are the largest cost centers for trucking companies; together they represented 62 percent of the average operating cost in 2011, according to the report, “An Analysis of the Operational Costs of Trucking,” published in late 2012 by the American Transportation Research Inc. (ATRI).
  10. The average fuel cost per mile for trucking fleets in 2011 was $1.71; converted into hourly figures using an empirical average truck operating speed, the total average industry cost per hour was $68.20 in 2011, according to ATRI.

Topics USA Trucking

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