CN wins approval to build 29.2-mile branch line to reach new Saskatchewan potash mine

CN wins approval to build 29.2-mile branch line to reach new Saskatchewan potash mine

By Bill Stephens | September 23, 2023

| Last updated on August 6, 2025


Construction is set to begin next year on spur that will connect the CN main line to the BHP Jansen mine

Map of new Canadian National branchline. CN new potash branch.
This map details the location of the spur Canadian National will build to reach the BHP Jansen potash mine in Saskatchewan. CN

Canadian National will build a 29.2-mile branch to reach a massive, $7.5 billion potash mine that’s under construction about 85 miles east of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.

The BHP Jansen mine – billed as the world’s largest – is expected to begin production in 2026. The mine will have an annual production capacity of 4.35 million metric tons of potash, which is enough to boost Canada’s already world-leading potash output by nearly 22%. The Australian mining company says the mine will be able to be expanded after Phase 1 is complete.

The mine, located about 7.5 miles north of Canadian Pacific Kansas City’s Sutherland Subdivision, will be served by both railways. A joint-use spur will lead from the mine’s loop tracks to a wye that will connect to the Sutherland Sub. CN’s new branch will cross CPKC on a diamond and connect with the joint-use spur.

The CN branch, which was approved by the Canadian Transportation Agency in July, will connect with the railway’s Watrous Subdivision at Milepost 102, just east of the town of Nokomis.

Main track construction is expected to begin next year, with completion scheduled for September 2025. Initial plans call for the mine to load up to four, 177-car unit trains for CN each week.

CN will haul the potash to British Columbia for export. The railway’s information page for the BHP spur project does not say whether the potash will be delivered to Vancouver or Prince Rupert, British Columbia, but Prince Rupert currently lacks a potash terminal.

The CN branch is the largest new railroad construction project in Canada since Canadian Pacific completed a 19-mile branch, the Belle Plaine Subdivision, to reach a new K+S Potash Canada mine near Bethune, Saskatchewan, in 2017. It was Canada’s first new potash mine in nearly 40 years.

Potash is primarily used in fertilizers that support plant growth and increase crop yields. Last year CP handled 160,000 potash carloads. CN doesn’t break out its potash volumes, but the commodity accounted for 13% of the railway’s $2.78 billion in grain and fertilizers revenue last year.

Aerial view of mining complex. CN new potash branch.
This aerial view shows the BHP Jansen mine complex in Saskatchewan in June of 2021. BHP
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