Business Fleet Top News

May 13, 2008

UPS Expands "Green Fleet" with 200 Hybrid Electrics in Addition to 300 CNG Vehicles

ARTICLE TOOLS        | E-MailPrint Subscribe

ATLANTA – UPS has just announced it has ordered 200 hybrid electric vehicles (HEVs) — the largest commercial order of such trucks by any company — in addition to another 300 compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicles for its U.S. delivery fleet, according to the company.

The purchase of the 500 additional vehicles means the UPS alternative fuel fleet will grow 30 percent from 1,718 to 2,218 low-carbon vehicles.

"Alternative fuel research and development is just one of the ways that UPS is mitigating climate change risks," said Bob Stoffel, UPS corporate sustainability officer. "We also are focused on aggressive conservation programs and improving network efficiency to cut fuel use."

The company's "green fleet" operates in the United States, Germany, France, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, and the United Kingdom and has traveled nearly 144 million miles since 2000. The fleet includes electric, hybrid electric, CNG, liquefied natural gas and propane-powered vehicles. UPS is also continuing work with the Environmental Protection Agency on a hydraulic hybrid delivery vehicle.

The 200 hybrid electric vehicles will be deployed in 2009 and join 50 HEV delivery trucks already in operation. The 200 trucks are expected to save 176,000 gallons of fuel annually and reduce CO2 emissions by 1,786 metric tons each year. That is the equivalent of removing almost 100 conventional UPS trucks from the road for a year.

The HEV's hybrid power system allows UPS to save on fuel and pollution-causing emissions. A battery pack, motor/generator and power control system are added, which allow electric power to be fed into the powertrain when conditions demand it, providing further savings.

The HEVs also use what is known as regenerative braking, meaning the energy produced in stopping the moving vehicle is captured and returned to the battery system as electrical energy. The efficient, computer-controlled combination of clean diesel and electric power, and regenerative braking produces dramatic improvements in fuel savings and emissions reductions.

The 300 CNG vehicles will be deployed later this year and join more than 800 such vehicles already in use in the U.S. CNG vehicles run on natural gas, a cost-effective, clean-burning and readily available fuel. These vehicles are expected to yield a 20-percent reduction in emissions over the cleanest diesel engines available today.

The CNG/HEV vehicle order follows the April 2008 deployment of 167 new CNG vehicles in Atlanta, Dallas, Los Angeles, Ontario, San Ramon, Fresno and Sacramento. In addition, UPS added 50 next-generation hybrid electric delivery trucks in Atlanta, Dallas, Houston and Phoenix in May 2007.

The chassis for the CNG and HEV trucks are being purchased from Freightliner Custom Chassis Corporation, with Eaton Corporation supplying the hybrid power system for the HEVs. The truck bodies are identical externally to the signature-brown trucks that now comprise the UPS fleet with additional script markings that will identify them as CNG and HEV vehicles.

 

RATE THIS STORY

Average Rating: Not yet rated

COMMENT ON THIS STORY

Please log in to write comment.

New user? Sign up for new membership now!

E-NEWSLETTER

Authoritative & Targeted! We offer e-newsletters that deliver targeted news and information for the entire fleet industry. Subscribe to one or all of them...they're FREE. SUBSCRIBE!

View the latest eNews DRIVING FORCE

NEWS ARCHIVE SEARCH

BLOG

Auto Focus

Chris Brown
Smart Car Impressions - Mine and Theirs

By Chris Brown
Whether you love it or hate it or you could frankly care less, the smart fortwo turns heads. Can that image be exploited in fleet?

Actual Car Quality versus Perceived Quality

By Chris Brown
Perception is reality. This statement is none truer than when it comes to attitudes about cars.

How Enterprise Funds Its Fleets

By Chris Brown

Beware of the Rental Car Rally

By Chris Brown

Market Trends

Mike Antich
Migration to 4-Cylinder Engines Continues with 2010-MY Ordering

By Mike Antich
The ongoing volatility of gasoline prices has prompted a growing number of fleets to transition to four-cylinder engines. This transition started in the 2008-MY and accelerated with 2009-MY ordering, when gas prices surpassed $4 per gallon in the summer of 2008. Early indications are that the migration to four-cylinder engines will continue with 2010-MY ordering. We have already seen glimpses of this trend in the 2010 RFPs submitted to major OEMs.

Does LIBOR Still Correlate to Corporate Borrowing?

By Mike Antich
LIBOR was developed in 1984 as a measure of the real rate at which banks lend money to each other. Since the early 1990s, LIBOR has been used as a funding index for fleet leases. However, when the recent turmoil in the financial markets prompted governments to "backstop" bank borrowing, the cost of lending money began to represent a government-guaranteed rate, which no longer correlated to fleet lessor costs.

Commercial Fleets Reveal 2010-MY Buying Intentions

By Mike Antich

Sluggish Economy Continues to Dampen Resale Values for Medium-Duty Trucks

By Mike Antich

Fleet Job Finder


Save time and money. Search for fleet jobs. Advance your career. Access our career coaching services

Job Seekers

  Post your resume & manage your job search.

Employers

  Post jobs & search top quality resumes.

Featured Jobs

STORE

$5.00

Business Fleet - September/October 2008

In This Issue:
Hybrid Large Trucks: the Road to Viability, High Fuel Costs Push Companies to a Managed Fleet Program, Is Diesel Still a Good Deal? and much more…