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AECOM\'s Jonathan James details the London Freight Plan and discussesthe transferability of these initiatives. Presented at AusIntermodal 2010 (www.ausintermodal.com), download to read more about the practical steps for sustainable freight distribution in urban and regional centres.
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UK CASE STUDY
Promoting collaboration: The transferability of
London Freight Plan initiatives
Practical steps for sustainable freight distribution in urban and regional centres
Jonathan James, Delivery Partner,
London Freight Plan and Director, AECOM UK
What is Our Definition of freight
Waste
Goods
Movement
Servicing +
Utilities
The Facts (Strategic)
Freight and the London Freight Plan
Mayor’s Transport Strategy
Is Sustainable Urban Freight even
remotely possible?Development
Intensification &
Mixed Uses
Social impacts
Regulations
Transport
modes
Promotion of
Pedestrian
and Cyclists
Events – ie
Olympics
Economic
Factors
Physical
Constraints
Environmental
factorsRestrictions
and Licensing
Control Schemes
Urban Area
How is Freight Viewed?
Why we need a fresh approach
•We have tried everything else
•Freight is a commercial contract with operator
and customer
•Governments approach is to add a new
regulation
•Regulation & compliance can increase costs
•Awarding freight contracts on cost alone can
increases risk of non-compliance, negating
benefit of regulation
There is More Than One Way to Skin a Cat
A New Approach
London Freight Plan
Economy
Environment
Social & Safety
Profit
CSR
Safety
TfL’s New Approach to Freight
OutcomesLess freight traffic growth Fewer Incidents
Less illegal kerbside activity Less congestion
Reduced operator costs Reduced enforcement
Less CO2 and other emissions
Land-use Planning
ConditionProcurement
Corporate Responsibility
Uptake
How London’s Approaches Work Together
Freight Operators &
Drivers
Regional and Local
Government
Customers/Businesses/
Premises/Sites
Commercial contract
Freight Operator Recognition Scheme (FORS)
FORS vision and development
FORS Benefits
November 12, 2010Development Planning Page 18
FORS membership progression
November 12, 2010Development Planning Page 19
FORS – September
2010
Status
FORS-registered depots 1,369
FORS-registered vehicles 61,750
FORS-registered London boroughs 20Silver members 31
Bronze members 247
Bronze and silver depots 1019Bronze and silver vehicles 43,448
Bronze and silver boroughs 13
Registered vehicles as a percentage of
commercial vehicles operating in London18.7%
FORS – August 2010
Benchmarking results0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
Average MPG across FORS (all veh
types)
0.0
50.0
100.0
150.0
200.0
250.0
PCNs Per 100K km
0.0
5.0
10.0
15.0
20.0
25.0
30.0
Incidents Per 100K km
Delivery and Servicing PlansConstruction Logistics Plans
Delivery and Servicing Plans (DSP) and Construction
Logistics Plans (CLP)
November 12, 2010Development Planning Page 23
How London’s Approaches Work Together
Freight Operators &
Drivers
Regional and Local
Government
Customers/Businesses/
Premises/Sites
Commercial contract
Delivery & Servicing Plans
Key Aims of a DSP / CLP
• Deliveries reduced, rescheduled or
consolidated, costs are lower
•Cut congestion / environmental impact
• Identify legal loading / unloading plans
• Encourage ‘green’ procurement
• Influence building design to minimise
construction related trips
• Improve safety compliance
Research to understand what's wrong
• Conflict between loading, servicing
and other road users
• Regent St 26,700 vehicles 1 in 5
are goods vehicles
• 1 in 5 are associated with Regent
Street
• 4 in 10 go to offices, only 1 in 5 go
to retail
• Most are 7am - 4 pm
• 7 in 10 are van the rest trucks
Marylebone High
Street
Key Elements of Delivery and Servicing Plans (DSPs)
and Construction Logistics Plans (CLPs)
Delivery & Servicing Plan /
Construction Logistics Plan
DSP Output examples
Ferrari Regent St Consolidation of every 3 loads into 1
Anthropologie
Regent Street
Consolidation of 80-100 small supplier
consignments / week into 4 loads
TfL (Palestra) Deliveries reduced by 20% (from 250/week)
Emirates Stadium Deliveries reduced by 20%, consolidated food &
milk deliveries
Fire
Brigade
Consolidation Centre -£90,000 supply chain
saving
University Stationery deliveries reduced by 80% - average
invoice value £28, cost to process £20
Transferability of London Freight Plan initiatives
But I Can’t Do It!
November 12, 2010Development Planning Page 33
3 2 30 31 32 33
38 39 50 69 91
99 108 117 118
119 124 129 130
• Policy 12 (Chapter 4)
The Mayor, through TfL, and working with the DfT, Network
Rail, train operating companies, London boroughs and other
stakeholders including business and the freight industry, will
seek to improve the distribution of freight through the
provision of better access to/from Strategic Industrial
Locations, delivery and servicing plans, and other efficiency
measures across London.
Proposal 117 (Chapter 5 part 6)
The Mayor, through TfL, and working with the London
boroughs, and other stakeholders in the public and private
sectors, will improve the efficiency and effectiveness of
freight operations through the promotion of ‘delivery and
servicing plans’, ‘construction logistics plans’, the Freight
Operator Recognition Scheme, Freight Quality Partnerships
and other efficiency measures across London.
2010 London’s Year of Cycling