TNT Express claims to be the
first express delivery company to experiment with longer trailers on British
roads in daily operations, reports London's Transport Intelligence.
Allowing 15 per cent more
freight, the new TNT trailers are 15.65-metres longer than the standard semis
in use today, which has aroused protest from British rail lobbyists who feel
this undermines railways.
Said UK-Ireland TNT chief
Simon Harper: "In days of high fuel prices, these innovative, modern
trailers offer exceptional loading capacity and space utilisation to keep
freight costs down to a minimum.
"It stands to reason
that, with bigger loads on each vehicle, we will cover fewer miles per volume
of parcels which will help with fuel consumption and reduce our C02
emissions," Mr Simon said.
"This equipment will
increase the full capacity 42 per cent over a standard 13.6-metre
trailer," he said.
The trailers will be
introduced on TNT's route between its main hub at Kingsbury, Staffordshire, 40
kilometres east of Wolverhampton and the Llantrisant depot in Mid-Glamorgan,
Wales.
The trial is part of a
government initiative announced by Transport Minister Mike Penning, allowing
longer trailers for 10 years.
Longer trailers cut tyre
wear, raising the centre axle which only deploys when weight exceeds 90 per
cent of the permitted axle load of nine tonnes.
Source : HKSG.
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