Skip to main content

UK needs new freight strategy says report

The Institution of Mechanical Engineers is calling for the UK Government to urgently introduce a national multi-modal freight strategy in a move to ease traffic congestion, improve air quality and boost the economy. According to its report ‘UK freight: in for the long haul’ up to 30 per cent of all haulage vehicles on UK roads are empty and about 150 million miles are driven unnecessarily by lorry drivers. It claims a national strategy could outline plans to make better use of urban consolidation centres
June 22, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The 5025 Institution of Mechanical Engineers is calling for the UK Government to urgently introduce a national multi-modal freight strategy in a move to ease traffic congestion, improve air quality and boost the economy.

According to its report ‘UK freight: in for the long haul’ up to 30 per cent of all haulage vehicles on UK roads are empty and about 150 million miles are driven unnecessarily by lorry drivers. It claims a national strategy could outline plans to make better use of urban consolidation centres, where joint local deliveries can be organised.

The problem is not confined to UK roads; the European Environment Agency estimates that 40 per cent of lorries in the Netherlands and 25 per cent in Germany are driving unladen. In the US, the NPTC National Private Truck Council claims that 28 per cent of trucks travel without loads.

According to Philippa Oldham, head of Transport at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers and lead author of the UK report, the Government has taken a welcome step in creating the National Infrastructure Commission, but must now urgently look to create a national multi-modal freight strategy to incentivise optimum use of that infrastructure and better co-ordinate the transportation of goods around the UK.

She said, “Estimates suggest that congestion costs the UK economy US$19 billion (£13 billion per year, with poor air quality being responsible for about 29,000 premature deaths each year. A national strategy which looks at the entire range of transport methods used to deliver freight would have the potential to ease congestion, improve air quality and boost the economy ― as well as making travelling and commuting more agreeable for the public as a whole.”

Related Content

  • October 2, 2020
    Siemens Mobility is clearing the air
    Tens of thousands of premature deaths in the UK alone are linked to air quality - but it doesn’t have to be that way. Siemens Mobility’s Wilke Reints explains why
  • September 2, 2016
    Government needs to support ultra low emission HGV market as well
    The Freight Transport Association has reacted positively to a new report from the House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee into sustainability in transport policy. In the report, the Committee states that fiscal support will be needed along with regulatory reform to develop the market in ultra-low emission vehicles. For cars it suggests reform to company car taxation, and for vans a reform to the weight limitations on alternatively powered vehicles.
  • May 1, 2014
    Congestion costs US trucking industry US$9.2 billion in 2013
    Congestion on US Interstate highways added over US $9.2 billion in operational costs to the trucking industry in 2013, according to research released by the American Transportation Research Institute (ATRI). ATRI, the trucking industry’s not-for-profit research institute, utilised motor carrier financial data along with billions of anonymous truck GPS data points to calculate congestion delays and costs on each mile of Interstate roadway. Delay totalled over 141 million hours of lost productivity, which equ
  • November 1, 2023
    The challenging European road to carbon neutrality and the need for distance-based charging
    Fuel taxes are falling and EVs have the potential to create social equity issues. The answer may lie in expanding the use of technology which has successfully been used for two decades with trucks