Scania Transport laboratory goes fossil free

2 MinutesBy NZ Trucking magazineNovember 13, 2018

Through its inhouse haulier, Scania demonstrates how carbon emission reductions by more than 95 percent can be achieved with existing technology.

Scania‘s Transport Laboratory is used for some of Scania‘s own internal transport. The operations consist of 45 trucks and coaches, of which 14 are tractors for long distance transport. As of 2018, the fleet runs only on fossil-free fuel (where possible – outside Sweden when there are no HVO/biodiesel fuel stations available, trucks refuel with regular diesel) and hybrid drive, which reduces carbon emissions by more than 95 percent.

It was founded 2008 as an extension of the company‘s research and development department in an effort to learn even more about its customers‘ challenges and how profitability can be improved. In its first five years the lab reduced fuel consumption by 20 percent and carbon emissions by 50 percent per transported tonne.

“This is about practising what we preach. We are not asking our customers and the industry in general to do something we are not willing to do ourselves,” says Jan Björklund, head of Scania Transport Laboratory.

Every day, the Scania Transport Laboratory operates 14 truck and trailer combinations between the manufacturing plants in Södertälje, Sweden, and Zwolle in the Netherlands. Over the course of a year, each truck is driven for approximately 400,000 kilometres, which is about three times as much as a truck would run in the same time in an average haulier operation. That means the lab offers a uniquely quick opportunity for Scania to test and assess vehicle quality and performance. Equally important is to test theories about flow analysis and planning as means to remove waste from the transport system, as well as driver training.

“One of the key learnings for us is the effect of planning and driver training. We see that it works and that fairly small adjustments have big impact. For example, reducing the speed from 90 to 80 km/h in the long haul operations reduces fuel by 10 percent whilst the comparative time loss is only 1 percent,” says Björklund.

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