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STB Maintains Competitive Status Quo at Port of Virginia, Norfolk Southern Retains Exclusive Rail Access
By MGN Editorial•April 8, 2026 at 01:02 PM
The Surface Transportation Board has ruled in favor of Norfolk Southern's exclusive rail access to Norfolk International Terminals, maintaining the competitive landscape at the Port of Virginia amid ongoing dispute with CSX.
The Surface Transportation Board has issued a ruling that preserves Norfolk Southern's competitive position at the Port of Virginia, maintaining the railroad's exclusive direct access to Norfolk International Terminals (NIT) in a decision that resolves a longstanding dispute with CSX.
The STB's decision upholds the existing competitive structure at one of the United States' busiest and most strategically important container ports. Norfolk Southern's exclusive arrangement with NIT provides the carrier with a significant operational advantage in serving the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast regions, while CSX operates access through alternative routing at the port facility.
The ruling has implications for container shipping rates, service reliability, and competitive dynamics across the region's inland transportation network. Port stakeholders, including ocean carriers, freight forwarders, and shippers relying on rail connections to and from the Port of Virginia, depend on the regulatory framework governing railroad access to terminal facilities.
The Port of Virginia, managed by the Virginia Port Authority, is one of the nation's leading East Coast gateways for container traffic and is critical to the supply chain connectivity between Southeast distribution centers and national markets. Railroad access configurations directly affect cargo handling efficiency, dwell times, and the port's competitive positioning against other Atlantic and Gulf Coast ports.
The STB's maintenance of the competitive status quo reflects the agency's approach to railroad regulation at major port facilities, where exclusive carrier arrangements have historically been permitted under federal transportation law. This decision follows continued industry discussion regarding port access, competitive equity, and infrastructure investment obligations.
For maritime stakeholders, the ruling clarifies the regulatory environment for rail-port connections at Norfolk, a key factor in evaluating logistics options and service providers for container movements in the Atlantic basin.
#Port of Virginia#Norfolk Southern#CSX#regulatory#rail access#container shipping#STB
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