120 likes | 133 Views
Understand the challenges faced by freight transport in London due to urbanization and changing customer demands. Explore solutions such as re-timing deliveries and collaboration between businesses to reduce congestion, emissions, and improve safety.
E N D
The London View Ian Wainwright, Head of Freight and Fleet Programmes, Transport for London
Global urbanisation • Increasing population • Increasingly urban • Increasingly 24/7 Outcomes • Congested roads • Pollution Nox, PMs • Safety • Economy
Rising demand: population and quality of life Changing customer demand Changing technology: fuel, telematics, use of real-time data Industry changes: internet ordering, omni-channel, near-sourcing, port-centric logistics Fragmentation of supply chains: growth of vans A higher political profile for freight: safety And freight is changing too
London’s Challenges • Population: increase by 1.7 million • Employment: increase in by 0.8 million • Supporting London's competitiveness • 35 highway authorities: TfL, London Boroughs • Existing regulations: relevant? conflicting? • Safety: 50% cycling KSIs • Environment: air quality, emissions and ‘place’ • Changing road-space allocation • Congestion could increase by: • 60% in central London • 25% in inner London • 5% in outer London Doing nothing is not an option
Central London – what we know DfT average annual daily flow HGV/LGV weekday movements in central London, by hour
Understanding freight sectors HGVs : CCZ - peak hour LGVs : CCZ - peak hour General / Unbranded
Achieving change Current level of freight activity: 100% voluntary incentives regulation Construction Target Essential activity
Building on what works • Working with the industry to: • Raise safety standards • Improve route planning • Enable collaboration between businesses • Encourage consolidation • Gather the evidence • Retime deliveries • With the Freight Forum
Retiming deliveries Re-timing Deliveries Consortium • Three boroughs, two supermarkets, two trade associations, London Councils • Detail, frustration and collaboration • Best practice guidance on core principles of successfully retiming deliveries • Technical trials • TfL premises • Matchmaking service
Conclusion • Cities are changing and so are customer demands • Collaboration is key to better long-term results • Retiming is possible - and can lead to less congestion, fewer emissions, safer roads and reduce business costs • Consider the local community • London is not unique - we can all learn from others across the world • Let’s keep talking and sharing
freight@tfl.gov.uk www.tfl.gov.uk/freight