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Presented by Dan Sabin, Iowa Northern Railway
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Iowa Northern Philosophy
• Run the Company like a business, not like a railroad. • Encourage customers to grow their business with great service
and fair, competitive freight rates. • Create new business. • Be the solution. • Tap the strengths of
each rail connection. • Empower employees
to do their best in safe and creative ways.
• Support the State and Communities served.
• Take some risk. • Facilitate new
industries and growth. • Be easy to do
business with. • Repeat, don’t act like a
railroad.
3
Iowa Northern Railway Company
• IANR covers North Eastern Iowa with 195 route miles
• Sabin Group acquired the line in 1994 with about 15,000 revenue cars handled
• Should hit nearly 65,000 carloads in 2012
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Iowa Northern Railway
• IANR is a unique short line with multiple rail connections providing independent access to North American Rail System.
• Nearly 1 billion bushels of corn within its market area.
• Cedar Rapids processors need 350 million bushels of corn annually, about 1 million per day.
• Aggressive in economic growth and development in market area.
• Averaged 18% annual growth between 2003 and 2011, despite two years of major flood recovery.
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The Company’s Current Markets • Grain
• Ethanol
• Wind Components
• Machinery
• Chemicals
• Fertilizer
• Bulk Products
• Food Products
• Bio-Mass
• Distillers Grains
• Corn Oil
• Trans-load Commodities
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Originally just a grain hauler, IANR elevators have increased volumes of grain from 230 cars per month
in 1994 to nearly 2,000 per month today.
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Grain Traffic • IANR will handle nearly 27,000 carloads of corn,
soybeans and oats in calendar year 2012 compared to 10,500 carloads in 2001. Most of the traffic moves to Cedar Rapids, providing high utilization of hopper cars.
• If Cedar Rapids was an independent nation, it would rank third in the world in the importation of corn, behind only Japan and Mexico.
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Ethanol Related Products
Iowa Northern has grown from zero car loads of ethanol related products in 2005 to 16,000 annual car loads in 2011.
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Iowa Northern Wind Energy Business
• IANR wind component distribution center at Manly is the largest in North America.
• Future wind business is contingent on extension of tax credits for wind energy.
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IANR provides rail to truck transload service at several locations, with new infrastructure at Waterloo and Manly
15
Bryant Yard Trans-loading
•Base customer trans-loading food grade and industrial starch. We are also handling other food grade traffic.
•Two new reload spurs have been built adjacent to IANR’s Bryant Yard in Waterloo to provide the ability to grow the business. Additional commodities: Powdered clay, tomato paste, magnesium chloride, lube oil, bentonite clay.
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Iowa Northern is pleased with initial traffic volumes of the 30 mile Garner Subdivision Acquisition
• Purchased the line from UP and started operations in November, 2011 as a joint venture with the community.
• IANR expected losses for the first year of operations—modestly profitable from the start.
• More traffic handled in first month than the line handled in the past five years.
• Averaging nearly 100 loads per month in first five months of operation—corn and fertilizer.
• The line is well suited for industrial growth.
• A gateway for a new market territory for IANR. 23
Bio-Mass Material • Regulators will require at least 10-20% biomass fuel for coal burning
power plants and a whole new industry is developing to convert crop waste into all types of fuels.
• Iowa Northern has approximately 12 million tons of excess crop waste within 30 miles of the line, providing an opportunity to generate up to 75,000+ carloads annually.
• Biomass will provide exceptional new revenue base to farmers.
• Biomass products could be the next major commodity handled by railroads.
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Future Plans
• Butler Logistics Park
• Manly Logistics Park
• Garner-Forest City Logistics Park
• Palo Logistics Park
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Manly Logistics Park will be the major logistics campus in the State of Iowa
Manly Logistics Park
Manly Terminal
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UP Spine Line
UP connection to Manly Yard
Manly Logistics Park • A major development adding 162 acre park dedicated to
reducing costs to shippers in North Iowa and Southern Minnesota
• Breaking ground this summer
• Sand drying and transfer station
• Trans loading facility for misc. commodities including lumber, machinery, distillers grains, edible beans, stuffing containers
• Steel Distribution Center-Steel coils and plates inbound by rail, outbound by truck to Midwestern markets
• Cold storage and freezer warehouse of major size with rail cross dock
• Substantial intermodal facility for Northern Iowa-Southern Minnesota
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Base case issues • IANR receives regular inquiries for rail service to supplement or
replace current moves of freight by truck, particularly to Texas, Mexico and California.
• Northern Iowa-Southern Minnesota is major origination area of agricultural, food and manufactured goods with heavy daily volumes to California, Texas and Mexico, both for domestic consumption and export.
• Dray access to existing intermodal terminals is very expensive to Northern Iowa-Southern Minnesota shippers with outbound-inbound imbalance of 10 to 1, requiring higher dray costs for one-way loaded moves. The Twin Cities, however is a larger consumption area to create inbound-outbound load balances for the region as a whole.
• The Upper Midwest does not have efficient access to good intermodal service to many desired markets.
• Existing intermodal service in the region is not geared for Texas-Mexico-California, so rail is not an option for most shippers.
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A new intermodal terminal for Northern Iowa and Southern Minnesota
• Manly is an excellent location for a new intermodal facility in an untapped market territory. The Upper Midwest area is truck oriented without suitable direct intermodal service to Texas, Mexico and California.
• Upper Midwestern dray costs are too expensive to existing intermodal facilities, so trucks retain almost all of the market to California, Texas and Mexico.
• MLP is close enough to the markets to be the immediate solution for significant intermodal business with a high consumption point in the Twin Cities Metropolitan area and high product origination in Northern Iowa and Southern Minnesota.
• With the lack of intermodal facilities in the region, Manly could become a favorable railhead funnel from a large gathering area.
• IANR can work closely with connecting lines to develop a strong feeder volume into their existing intermodal networks.
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MANLY
TWIN CITIES
DES MOINES
WATERLOO
OMAHA
MASON CITY
CEDAR RAPIDS
SIOUX CITY
DAVENPORT
DUBUQUE
ROCHESTER LA CROSSE
WINONA Highway Miles Manly To: Waterloo 94 Rochester 95 Minneapolis 124 Winona 125 Des Moines 130 La Crosse 145 Cedar Rapids 148 Dubuque 177 Sioux Falls 214 Sioux City 223 Davenport 229 Omaha 265
SIOUX FALLS
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High dray costs from the area currently prevents shippers from conversion of their freight to rail
Manly based trucking support would lower dray costs between MLP and the Twin Cities providing greater volume
Mason City, IA to: Highway Miles Est. Cost Per Mile Est. Dray Cost
Minneapolis 138 1.75-2.50+FS 250-550
Rochelle, IL 305 2.50+FS 1,048
Kansas City 462 2.25+FS 1,430
Chicago 350 2.50+FS 1,203
Joliet 358 2.50+FS 1,230
Council Bluffs 247 2.50+FS 850
MLP 12 Hourly 75
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MLP layout design with intermodal facility included
• Major cross dock and warehouse operation planned adjacent to potential intermodal site, allowing consolidation, stuffing and heavy containers. Steel distribution facility adjacent to cross dock.
• Major truck base planned near MLP. 34
Sand Processing
Trans-Load Tracks
Steel Distribution
Cold Storage Warehouse & Cross Dock
Intermodal Facility
Loop Track