Cutting Carbon Emissions
Monday, August 17, 2009 at 12:56AM | Cutting Carbon Emissions Through Haulage Loads
By Luke Humble

This
may seem a slightly unlikely article for me to be writing at first.
Working in the road transport industry as I do, many people assume it
is automatically impossible to have a green conscience. This isn’t
surprising, given that my job depends on hundreds of haulage vehicles
dragging loads up and down the country, producing all those environment
damaging carbon emissions along the way. Actually, the truth is that my
job allows me to be both a vocal green advocate and a road haulage
representative while still helping me claim a regular salary. No, I
haven’t invented a magical device that changes exhaust emissions into
pure oxygen – it’s simply thanks to the nature of the freight exchange.
It works like this: under normal circumstances, owner operators or
haulage companies manage their own loads with their customers, make
their delivery and then return home to the depot for the next load.
Environmentally and on a human level, this is in no way efficient. The
driver is, in effect, only being paid for the outbound journey, and in
these times when the price of fuel seems to be rising on an almost
daily basis, this is financially crippling. Now consider a freight
exchange – a network of suppliers and haulage drivers/companies who
distribute their loads between them meaning that the return journey can
contain another job. This means the trip is paid for (both ways) and
therefore the haulage company is not operating at an inefficient loss
(even for a minute) and profits can rise.
All well and good, but this still isn’t looking particularly
environmentally friendly is it? Wait, I’m getting to that part.
Now, if this return load is being distributed back to someone who is
already out on the road, it won’t be given to an owner operator for
whom that would be the sole purpose of the trip. This means that there
are less wasted journeys (every mile involved has a delivery attached)
and therefore less unnecessary carbon emissions all over the place.
Better still, if this collaboration for efficiency continues across the
industry, then less road haulage vehicles will be required to shift all
the work, and we may even see the decommissioning of these
carbon-emitting behemoths. The environment will surely jump for joy.
Unlike most environmentally friendly solutions which require an element
of self sacrifice and extra work, the freight exchange actually creates
benefits across the board: the haulage companies and owner operators
make more money, the roads get less congested and the environment
becomes less polluted. Efficiency shines through and everybody wins –
and for that reason, we have seen impressive pick up for our online
freight exchange for the 7.5tonne and above market: Haulage Exchange.
I can’t say whether our customer base is growing for monitory or
environmental reasons (it's probably both), but whichever it is, the
gradual migration to Haulage Exchange and other freight exchanges is
great news for the environment. And if our drivers save themselves
significant money as well, then all the better. What harm is a little
incentive when the environment is at stake?
About the Author: Luke Humble is the Website manager for The Transport
Exchange Group. Their two exchanges, Courier Exchange and Haulage
Exchange are two of the largest and fastest growing independent freight exchanges.
Source: www.isnare.com
Permanent Link: http://www.isnare.com/?aid=196704&ca=Automotive






