There’s an old Chinese saying, “If you want to change the world, begin with the world around you.” This is exactly the direction the freight transport industry has decided to take after the dissatisfaction felt with the results achieved last month at Copenhagen’s climate summit. Taking the lead in the discussion over the need and methods that should be used to compile the data on carbon emissions and how we should go about reducing the carbon emissions. The freight transport industry will collect data on the freight industries carbon emissions using a plan devised and implemented by the Freight Transport Association (FTA). This plan will be used to provide those who make the rules and regulations with a database to help formulate future blueprints for plans to reduce carbon emissions.
Called the Logistics Carbon Reduction Scheme (LCRS), the plan aims to collect data on carbon emissions, inform the proper authorities of the numbers, and then use the data to help formulate plans to reduce the carbon footprint of the freight transport industry. The plan is backed by 23,000 drivers and members of the FTA that conduct owner operator trucking on a daily basis.
The changes that are occurring in our planetary environment are too significant for us to just ignore and the freight transport industry is showing by example that each industry needs to begin with its own house, if we are to successfully battle climate change. The industry is showing that they welcome the development of a consistent and useful method to measure the freight transport industries’ carbon footprint.
The plan doesn’t at the present moment include all firms conducting freight transport services in the world or even North America, but this is a first step. Still, this does give the government hard data to base the policy changes that we know are coming, instead of just putting in place rules and regulations without the benefit of said data.