A leading U.S. freight railroad has announced it will refile a revised application in March 2026 for approval of its proposed merger with another major Class I carrier, following a federal regulator’s decision that the initial filing was incomplete. The transaction, if approved, is expected to create the nation’s first transcontinental railroad network and could reshape freight logistics across North America.
The Surface Transportation Board (STB) rejected the original merger application in January, ruling it did not include all required information under regulatory standards — a procedural setback that did not kill the transaction but mandated a more detailed filing. Industry observers note that regulators have indicated the missing details must be addressed before formal review can proceed.
Rail executives have confirmed plans to rework and resubmit the proposal as early as March 2026, with company leadership indicating confidence that the deal can still close, potentially as soon as early 2027 once the regulatory process restarts. The merger, originally valued at around USD 85 billion, is designed to enhance service by combining western and eastern U.S. rail networks into a single system, potentially creating thousands of new single‑line service routes and shifting substantial freight volumes from road to rail.
The merger has drawn mixed reactions from shippers, labour groups and industry stakeholders. Supporters argue it would enhance competitive reach and operational efficiency, while critics — including some industry coalitions and freight customers — have raised concerns about reduced competition, job impacts and potential service disruptions.
In parallel, regulatory debate continues over broader rail sector issues such as access rights for second carriers at sole‑served locations, even as debate around the merger’s competitive effects intensifies amid broader freight market dynamics.
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