In The News
ATA Asks Congress toSupport Trucking's Environmental initiatives
The American Trucking Associations Tuesday asked Congress to support
the trucking industry's environmental initiatives, which it says will
reduce fuel consumption by 86 billion gallons and reduce the carbon
footprint of all vehicles by nearly a billion tons
over the next 10 years.
The Owner Operator Independent Drivers Association, however, issued a
release attacking ATA's testimony, saying it "believes recommendations
made under the guise of environmental sustainability at a hearing
before the U.S. House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee are
meant to eliminate competition, not emissions."
Testifying on behalf of ATA before the Subcommittee on Highways and
Transit of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, ATA
First Vice Chairman Tommy Hodges, Chairman of Shelbyville, Tenn.-based
truckload carrier Titan Transfer, Inc. asked Congress to:
* Enact a national 65 mph speed limit and govern truck speeds at 65 mph or slower to reduce fuel consumption;
* Increase funding for the Environmental Protection Agency's SmartWay
program, a valuable voluntary greenhouse gas reduction program designed
to increase energy efficiency while significantly reducing air
pollution;
* Support national fuel economy standards for medium and heavy-duty
trucks leading to lower emissions through reduced fuel consumption;
* Implement financial incentives in the way of tax credits or grants to
expedite the introduction of idling reduction equipment across the
nation;
* Invest in infrastructure improvements to fix the nation's most
critical bottlenecks, easing congestion and saving 32 billion gallons
of fuel and reducing carbon emissions by 314 million tons over 10
years;
* Fund research and development in new technologies that will improve
average fuel consumption and generate greater fuel efficiency;
* Promote the use of more productive truck combinations resulting in
fewer truck miles traveled and saving more than 20.5 billion gallons of
diesel fuel and reducing carbon emissions by 227 million tons over 10
years.
"It is in our best business interest to reduce our energy consumption,
improve our profitability, and reduce our levels of emissions and
greenhouse gases," said Hodges. "Our industry is proud of its
environmental record in reducing emissions and transitioning to clean
fuels."
OOIDA Executive Vice President Todd Spencer begged to differ. "Upping
truck weights and mandating speed limiters in the name of
sustainability is irresponsible and ridiculous," he said in a
statement. "Those things have nothing to do with making trucking more
'green' and everything to do with adding more 'green' to the pockets of
large corporations."
OOIDA contends effective environmental solutions begin with addressing
inefficiencies in the supply chain such as time and fuel wasted by
truckers waiting to be loaded or unloaded and the amount of empty miles
truckers must drive.
Last year, the American Trucking Associations committed to a
sustainability program. ATA says Implementing all the program's
features will reduce fuel consumption by 86 billion gallons and reduce
the carbon footprint of all vehicles by nearly a billion tons over the
next 10 years.