• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

National Network for the Transportation Workforce

  • Home
  • About NNTW
    • About NNTW
    • Contact Us
  • Workforce Initiatives
    • Intelligent Transportation Systems
    • National Transportation Career Pathways Initiative
    • Women in Transportation
    • Road Safety Champion Program
    • Empowering the New Mobility Workforce
  • Career Exploration
    • Transportation Career Pathways
    • Interviews with Transportation Professionals
    • Environmental Career Path Profiles
    • Careers in Computer & Data Science
  • News & Events
  • Resource Center
    • Labor Market Analysis
    • Education & Training
    • Workforce Development
    • The Clean Transportation Workforce
    • Digital Storytelling: The Value of StoryMaps
    • Environmental Career Competencies
  • Mobility Matters
You are here: Home / Resources / Best Practices in Urban Freight Management: Lessons from an International Survey

Best Practices in Urban Freight Management: Lessons from an International Survey

Author: Laetitia Dablanc
Abstract:

Freight movement is essential to the function of metropolitan areas, yet generates many externalities, including congestion, air pollution, noise, and greenhouse gas emissions. Metropolitan areas around the world are seeking ways to manage urban freight and its impacts. This paper presents the results from a comprehensive international survey of urban freight management strategies. The objective was to examine the effectiveness of alternative strategies and assess their transferability for U.S. implementation. Three categories were used to describe urban freight strategies: last-mile or first-mile deliveries and pickups, environmental mitigation, and trade node strategies. Many possibilities were found for the improved management of urban freight and its impacts; these possibilities included labeling and certification programs, incentive-based programs for voluntary emissions reduction, local land use and parking policies, and more stringent national fuel efficiency and emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks. More research is needed on intrametropolitan freight movements and on the effectiveness of existing policies and strategies.

Website: http://trid.trb.org/view.aspx?…
Source: TRB - TRID
Focus Areas: Air Pollution, Best Practices, Environmental impacts, Freight traffic, Greenhouse gases, International, noise, Pickup and Delivery Service, Policy, Strategic planning, Surveys, Urban areas, Urban goods movement
Resource Types: Academic paper
Target Education Levels: Bachelors Degree, Graduates, practitioners, researchers

Copyright © 2023 National Network for the Transportation Workforce • Contact Us