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Republican state AGs express concerns over Union Pacific's deal with Norfolk Southern

Nine Republican attorneys general raised concerns on Friday about Union Pacific's plans to purchase smaller rival Norfolk Southern for $85 billion, creating the first U.S. Coast-to-Coast freight rail operator.

In a letter sent to the Surface Transportation Board by Tennessee Attorney-General Jonathan Skrmetti, and Kansas Attorney-General Kris Kobach that was seen by, the officials expressed concern about the deal, which they said would result in "undue market consolidation" and "stifle competition, resulting in higher prices, less reliability and less innovation, at the expense America's producers and consumers."

If approved, the tie-up could help reshape U.S. freight railroad industry, streamline operations, and eliminate interchange delays at key hubs such as Chicago.

Attorneys general from Ohio, Florida and other states, including North Dakota, South Dakota Mississippi, Montana, and Iowa, said that the merger could lead to high shipping costs, which could "kneecap American manufacturers' ability compete with foreign companies."

The group also stated that "the downstream impact of the merger poses a significant risk, not only for our industrial base, but also for our agricultural producers." This merger, in the end, could compromise our national safety.

Union Pacific responded on Friday by saying that it is looking forward to submitting their application to the STB to "detail how this combination will be good for America, meet the threshold to advance public interest and increase competition." The railroad said it has won the support of key unions as well as others in order to "ensure that rail is not forgotten."

Norfolk Southern has not yet commented.

The railroads announced earlier on Friday that over 99% of both companies' shareholders voted for the merger. The STB could take between 12 and 18 months to review the deal.

Railroads have been struggling with the volatile nature of freight volumes, increasing labor and fuel prices, and increased pressure from shippers regarding service reliability.

After meeting with Union Pacific CEO Jim Vena in September to discuss the largest U.S. railroad merger for decades, Donald Trump stated that the merger "sounds great to me".

Union Pacific is the dominant freight rail carrier in Western United States. Norfolk Southern, on the other hand, is the leading carrier in Eastern United States. Together, the two railroads form one of four major U.S. class I railroads along with BNSF Railway, CSX Corp and BNSF Railway.

(source: Reuters)