Fuel costs have traditionally been the largest line-item expense for motor carriers. Great West Casualty Company believes the first step in changing this aspect of the company’s culture is to audit current fuel consumption to determine how much is being consumed so reduction goals can be established. For smaller motor carriers, the focus may only be on company trucks, but larger fleets might include all company vehicles, including employee-owned vehicles, to measure fuel consumption across the board. Gathering this baseline data will be easier if the company operates its own fuel tanks, uses fuel cards, or has vehicles fitted with telematics.
Once a baseline of fuel consumption is established, set goals to lower usage, then communicate your strategy to the entire company. Here are some ideas to help achieve these goals:
- Cut Mileage. The simplest way to reduce fuel consumption is by cutting mileage. By identifying crossover routes, incompatible time slots, outlying jobs, and the extra miles traveled to avoid traffic hotspots, a fleet can optimize routes to save on fuel costs. Other benefits include faster route completion times and more productive drivers as well as a reduction in mileage-related secondary costs like lease and maintenance costs, depreciation, etc.
- Identify Root Causes. Excessive fuel consumption could be the result of a number of factors. Driver behavior, training deficiencies, operational issues, or equipment problems could be the root cause. For example, drivers with a propensity for speeding will burn fuel faster. To correct this performance issue, do not assume training is the answer, for the root cause could be the company culture in which drivers are being pushed by dispatch to drive harder. Higher fuel consumption might also be traced to a particular customer’s location, where excessive idle time is common due to long lines to get loaded and unloaded.
- Provide Incentives. Rewarding the most fuel-efficient drivers is an effective way to create healthy competition and instill a culture that embraces fuel economy. Peer pressure can be a great motivator to help bring about positive change. Many successful motor carriers have posted leaderboards in the driver room and around the facility for all to see. Just be sure to make it a level playing field and take into consideration vehicle type, routes, etc. At the conclusion of each contest period, let the winner choose his or her prize. Make it meaningful – something he or she will take to heart. Word will spread that being the most fuel-efficient driver pays off.
Call to Action
- Identify three ways the fleet can reduce fuel consumption.
- Require drivers with speeding violations to attend mandatory fuel savings training.
- Implement a fuel savings contest and reward the most fuel-efficient drivers.
Read the full Great West article here.