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Ferromex
View on WikipediaFerromex system map (own rails in blue, trackage rights in green) | |
| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Parent company |
|
| Headquarters | Mexico City[1] |
| Reporting mark | FXE |
| Locale | Mexico |
| Dates of operation | 1998–present |
| Predecessor | Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México |
| Technical | |
| Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) standard gauge |
| Length | 12,100 km (7,500 mi) |
| Other | |
| Website | Ferromex |
Ferromex (reporting mark FXE) (syllabic abbreviation of Ferrocarril Mexicano, 'Mexican Railway') is a private rail consortium that operates the largest (by mileage) railway in Mexico with combined mileage (Ferromex + Ferrosur) of 12,100 kilometres (7,500 mi) and is often classed with North American Class I railroads.
History
[edit]Ferromex began operating on February 19, 1998, following the privatization of most of the government-owned railways by Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo Ponce de León. Ferromex operates more than 9,610 kilometers (5,970 mi) of track and interconnects five major inland Mexican cities, five cities along the border with the United States, four seaports on the Pacific Ocean, and one more on the Gulf of Mexico. Grupo México owns 74%[2] and Union Pacific Corporation owns 26% of the company.[3] The Ferromex system operates 9,610 km of Ferromex tracks plus 2,654 kilometers (1,649 mi) of Ferrosur tracks.
Attempted merger with Ferrosur
[edit]In November 2005, Grupo México, the majority owner of Ferromex, purchased Infraestructura y Transportes Ferroviarios, the parent company of Ferrosur, another of Mexico's Class I railroads, in a US$309 million stock transaction.[4][5] The Mexican Federal Competition Commission (CFC) had rejected a proposed 2002 merger of Ferromex and Ferrosur amid opposition from Ferromex competitor Grupo Transportación Ferroviaria Mexicana (TFM).[6]
Following the November 2005 purchase of Ferrosur by Grupo México, Kansas City Southern de México (KCSM), successor to TFM, petitioned the Mexican government to block the merger of Ferrosur and Ferromex. The CFC rejected the merger in June 2006 and stated that the merger would have led to excessive concentration in the railway industry to the detriment of consumers and competing shippers.[7] However, in March 2011, a tribunal ruled in Grupo México's favor, and the merger was permitted.[8]
Passenger services
[edit]Ferromex hosts the Ferrocarril Chihuahua al Pacífico "ChePe" railroad, a tourist line that runs through the Copper Canyon. Ferromex also operates the Tequila Express, which runs from Guadalajara to a tequila distillery in Amatitán.
Other
[edit]Grupo México Transportes, with Fundación Grupo México, operates Dr. Vagón, a hospital train that offers free, complete healthcare for hard to reach communities in Mexico.[9][10]
Rolling stock
[edit]In January 2011, Ferromex ordered 44 new SD70ACe locomotives from EMD, its first order since 2006.[11]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Grupo México, About us, Offices". Archived from the original on December 5, 2008. Retrieved 2009-03-02.
- ^ Barrow, Keith (February 5, 2015). "Grupo Mexico mulls sale of rail business stake". International Railway Journal.
- ^ Garcia, Beto Vargas (May 11, 2022). "For 30 Years, We Are Union Pacific de Mexico". Union Pacific. Archived from the original on July 18, 2025.
- ^ FWN Select, "Grupo Mexico Buys Ferrosur Railway From Carso" (Nov. 25, 2005)
- ^ "Abandonments & Acquisitions". Trains Magazine. Vol. 66, no. 3. March 2006. p. 15. ISSN 0041-0934.
- ^ FWN Select, "Mexico's Antitrust Agency To Study Railway Merger" (Nov. 28, 2005)
- ^ FWN Select, "Mexico's Antitrust Commission Rejects Rail Merger Appeal" (Nov. 15, 2006)
- ^ "Mexican Tribunal OKs Grupo Mexico Railroad merger". Reuters. 2011-03-28. Archived from the original on 2011-04-01.
- ^ "Responsabilidad-social". Archived from the original on 2023-04-12. Retrieved 2023-04-12.
- ^ Dr. Vagon
- ^ "Railway Gazette: EMD wins two SD70ACe orders". Archived from the original on 2011-02-18. Retrieved 2011-02-13.
External links
[edit]Ferromex
View on GrokipediaOverview
Founding and Ownership Structure
Ferromex, formally known as Ferrocarril Mexicano, S.A. de C.V., emerged from the privatization of Mexico's state-owned Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México (FNM) under President Ernesto Zedillo's administration. In June 1997, the Mexican government awarded a 50-year concession for the Pacific-North and Bajío railway corridors to Grupo Ferroviario Mexicano, S.A., a consortium led by Grupo México, S.A.B. de C.V., in partnership with Union Pacific Corporation.[9] [10] This concession, valued at approximately US$524 million for the northwestern lines, marked the formation of Ferromex as the operator of Mexico's largest rail network post-privatization, with the company officially commencing freight operations in 1998.[11] The ownership structure reflects the original consortium agreement, with Grupo México Transportes, S.A.B. de C.V. (GMXT), a subsidiary of Grupo México, holding a 74% controlling stake and Union Pacific Corporation retaining 26%.[12] [4] This arrangement has remained stable, providing Union Pacific with strategic influence over cross-border operations while ensuring Grupo México's dominant role in domestic management and expansion.[12] Ferromex operates as a private concessionaire under regulatory oversight from Mexico's Secretariat of Infrastructure, Communications and Transportation, with obligations to maintain and invest in the assigned infrastructure over the concession term.[13]Network Extent and Core Operations
Ferromex maintains the largest railway network in Mexico, operating over 10,000 kilometers (6,200 miles) of track that spans 24 states and covers 86% of the nation's GDP.[14][15] This extensive infrastructure interconnects major industrial and commercial zones, including five principal inland cities, five U.S. border gateways, and key seaports, enabling robust domestic connectivity and seamless cross-border exchanges with northern partners.[16] The company's core operations center on freight transportation, positioning it as Mexico's leading cargo rail operator with a focus on efficiency and reliability.[6] Ferromex handles diverse commodities, including minerals and metals, automotive goods, intermodal containers, agricultural products, chemicals, cement, and energy resources such as coal, coke, diesel, oils, asphalt, and liquefied petroleum gas.[3][17] These operations are supported by a substantial fleet comprising 808 locomotives and 28,000 railcars, facilitating the annual movement of approximately 1.9 million railcars and over 65 billion ton-kilometers.[6] Strategic partnerships with U.S. railroads like Union Pacific and BNSF enhance cross-border capabilities, particularly for intermodal and automotive traffic, while recent initiatives like the Falcon Premium service extend all-rail connectivity to Canada.[6] Infrastructure investments, including track upgrades to support heavier axle loads on more than half of its network, underscore ongoing efforts to boost capacity and competitiveness in freight hauling.[18]Historical Development
Pre-Privatization Era
The Mexican railroad network began developing in the mid-19th century, with the first construction contract signed in the 1830s, though substantive progress occurred later under President Porfirio Díaz, who oversaw the expansion from fewer than 400 miles of track in the 1880s to over 15,000 miles by 1910, connecting major industrial centers and ports.[13][19] These lines were initially private enterprises, but the federal government consolidated them into the Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México (FNM) in 1909, acquiring majority ownership to centralize control amid revolutionary instability.[20] Full nationalization came in 1938 under President Lázaro Cárdenas, who expropriated remaining private stakes to integrate the system under state monopoly, emphasizing public service over profitability and employing tens of thousands in operations that included both freight and extensive passenger routes.[21] Post-World War II, the FNM handled growing cargo volumes in minerals, agriculture, and manufactures, operating a network spanning approximately 20,000 miles of track by the 1970s, though maintenance lagged due to fiscal constraints and subsidized tariffs that prioritized accessibility over efficiency.[22] By the 1980s, the FNM grappled with systemic inefficiencies, including overstaffing of around 47,000 workers, chronic operating losses totaling hundreds of millions of pesos annually, and declining freight market share as highways and trucking captured over 80% of cargo traffic due to rail's slower speeds and unreliable service.[22] Aging infrastructure, with many tracks dating to the Díaz era and locomotives averaging over 20 years old, resulted in frequent derailments and capacity bottlenecks, particularly on key north-south and Pacific corridors that would later form Ferromex's core.[20] Passenger services, once a mainstay, deteriorated amid underinvestment, setting the stage for operational restructuring in the decade's end.[13]Formation Through Privatization (1998)
In the mid-1990s, Mexico's government under President Ernesto Zedillo initiated the privatization of the state-owned Ferrocarriles Nacionales de México (FNM), a system plagued by chronic underinvestment, operational inefficiencies, and substantial debt exceeding $5 billion.[13] The restructuring divided the approximately 26,000 km national network into six primary freight concessions for 50-year terms, plus smaller short-line operations, aiming to attract private capital and restore viability through competitive bidding.[23] Ferromex emerged from the award of the Pacific-North concession, spanning roughly 9,500 km of track from the U.S. border states of Sonora, Chihuahua, Coahuila, and Nuevo León southward through central Mexico to Veracruz and Pacific ports like Manzanillo and Lázaro Cárdenas.[24] The consortium Grupo Ferroviario Mexicano S.A. de C.V., led by mining conglomerate Grupo México with a 74% stake and U.S. carrier Union Pacific holding 26%, submitted a winning bid of $521 million for the concession in 1997.[11] This bid, finalized on June 27, 1997, outcompeted other proposals and secured rights to operate the northwest and Pacific-North lines, which included key interconnections to U.S. railroads at border crossings like Ciudad Juárez and Piedras Negras.[24] The privatization process faced labor opposition, including strikes by FNM unions protesting job losses and severance terms, but proceeded amid government commitments to rehire workers under new contracts.[13] Ferrocarril Mexicano S.A. de C.V. (Ferromex) was formally established as Grupo México's operating subsidiary to manage the concession, commencing freight services on February 19, 1998.[10] Initial operations focused on rehabilitating dilapidated infrastructure, with Ferromex investing $350 million in track upgrades, signaling, and rolling stock between 1998 and 1999 to boost capacity from FNM's pre-privatization levels of under 10 million tons annually.[13] Union Pacific later divested its minority interest, consolidating Grupo México's control, which enabled focused expansion while adhering to concession rules limiting competition on parallel routes.[23]Expansion, Mergers, and Acquisitions
In 2005, Grupo México Transportes (GMXT), the parent entity controlling Ferromex, acquired a 75% stake in Ferrosur, Mexico's second-largest railroad operator, for integration into its transportation portfolio alongside Ferromex.[25] This move expanded GMXT's network coverage to southeastern Mexico but did not immediately consolidate operations due to regulatory scrutiny over potential market dominance. A proposed full merger of Ferromex and Ferrosur faced rejection by Mexico's Federal Competition Commission in June 2006, citing excessive concentration in rail freight services.[26] Subsequent legal challenges led to a 2011 tribunal ruling permitting the merger under conditions to mitigate antitrust concerns, enabling operational synergies such as shared rate agreements with competitors like Kansas City Southern de México in 2010.[27] Despite this, Ferromex and Ferrosur have maintained separate corporate structures under GMXT, with Ferrosur's 1,549 km network complementing Ferromex's primary lines without full legal amalgamation as of 2023.[28] Ferromex pursued organic expansion through significant investments in rolling stock. In July 2010, the company authorized the purchase of 44 new locomotives, boosting cargo capacity by 7.5%.[29] In September 2014, Ferromex and Ferrosur jointly acquired 34 EMD SD70ACe locomotives, further modernizing the combined fleet for heavy-haul freight.[30] GMXT's international acquisitions bolstered Ferromex's cross-border capabilities. Texas Pacifico Transportation, a Class III short-line railroad in West Texas linking to Ferromex at the U.S.-Mexico border, commenced operations as a GMXT subsidiary in 2001, facilitating seamless freight handoffs.[31] In March 2017, GMXT acquired the Florida East Coast Railway in an all-cash transaction, adding 370 km of track and intermodal facilities to enhance North American logistics integration with Ferromex's border gateways.[32]Post-2010 Growth and Modernization
Following the approval of its expansion program in 2010, Ferromex invested over US$8 billion through 2016 in infrastructure, locomotives, and capacity enhancements, more than doubling its operational scale.[33] This included US$127 million in 2010 alone for track expansions, new constructions, and maintenance, marking a 3% increase from 2009 levels.[34] Key early actions encompassed the acquisition of 44 new locomotives in 2010, boosting cargo capacity by 7.5%.[29] Fleet modernization accelerated with the purchase of 34 EMD SD70ACe locomotives in 2014, part of broader investments exceeding US$4 billion since 2006 in rolling stock, technology, and facilities, with post-2010 efforts emphasizing efficiency gains.[30] The 2013 antitrust approval of the Ferromex-Ferrosur merger enabled operational integration, streamlining routes and reducing duplication across northern and southern networks, which supported volume growth including a 6.6% rise in carloads from 2010 to 2011.[18] Infrastructure upgrades included yard expansions and track reinforcements, contributing to a 7% increase in carload volumes and 14% revenue growth in recent years.[35] Technological advancements featured the phased replacement of the legacy SICOTRA control system with NetControl, a modern platform developed in partnership with Union Pacific, aimed at enhancing real-time dispatch and predictive maintenance by the mid-2010s.[36] In 2016, Mexico extended Ferromex's concession for the Pacífico-Norte line, facilitating further upgrades projected for completion by 2018.[37] Recent initiatives under parent Grupo México Transportes include a 2025 plan for 15% locomotive fleet expansion, addition of 1,600 railcars, and yard modernizations, alongside MXN 900 million (about US$45 million) invested in 2024 for a 5% capacity uplift.[38][39] These efforts have solidified Ferromex's market position, handling over 40% of Mexico's rail freight amid rising intermodal and automotive traffic.[35]Freight and Passenger Operations
Primary Freight Commodities and Routes
Ferromex's primary freight commodities include bulk materials transported in open-top gondolas, such as minerals, coal, metals, and scrap products.[40][16] Boxcars handle general merchandise, encompassing auto parts, beer, foodstuffs, appliances, paper, and finished goods.[41] Intermodal platforms facilitate container shipments, supporting loads of 20 to 53 containers per train with capacities up to 73 tons.[16] Agricultural grains, particularly corn imported from the United States, constitute a major volume, directed toward northern Mexican feedlots and industrial users, though network congestion has prompted repeated embargoes in 2024.[42][43] Unit trains designated "Granelero" manage these bulk flows, including sand and cement alongside grains and coal.[44] The company's rail network exceeds 10,000 kilometers, concentrating on northern and central Mexico while linking to southern extensions via affiliates.[45] Key routes originate at U.S. border gateways, including Piedras Negras (Eagle Pass, Texas) for grain-heavy traffic, Ciudad Juárez (El Paso, Texas), and others, channeling imports southward to industrial clusters in Monterrey, Guadalajara, and Mexico City.[42][16] Pacific coast connections support export-oriented mineral and intermodal movements to ports like Manzanillo and Lázaro Cárdenas, while terminals in Hermosillo and Monterrey enable efficient domestic and cross-border distribution.[16] Cross-border partnerships with Union Pacific and BNSF enhance seamless North American corridors, with Falcon Premium service extending to Canada.[6] Main lines operate as dark territory in segments, handling 16 trains daily on high-volume paths like Piedras Negras southbound.[42]
