This downloadable magazine examines the rising costs for motor carriers due to tighter emissions regulations and labor costs, and explores the industry's shift towards decarbonization with various alternative fuel vehicles.
By LM Staff ·
June 26, 2024
The cost of doing business as a motor carrier has never been higher. ACT Research estimates that tightening federal and state-required emissions regulations, labor costs and other factors will cause medium- and heavy-duty vehicle costs to rise by between 12% and 14%.
However, in mid-2024, the biggest change coming is the push for “decarbonization” of an industry that was built on the diesel engine. Whether it’s a fully electric, a variety of diesel run on alternative fuels, hydrogen-powered or even battery-powered, the truck of 2035 is likely to be run on a completely different power grid than today’s traditional diesel fuel.
In this Special Digital Issue, we have curated stories that encapsulate the current state of U.S. motor freight services in an effort to help shippers understand the challenges their truckload, less-than-truckload, parcel and last-mile carriers now face as they aim to achieve service levels that match new cost and regulatory demands.
Advantech News & Resources
Warehouse/DC Operations & Automation: Time to transform operations
2024 Motor Freight Trends
Choosing the right OS for Warehouse Management App needs
How to Select Mobile PCs in an Expanding Technology Climate
Keeping Vaccines Safe: Cold Chain Monitoring
Using Blockchain to Enhance Trust at all Logistics Touchpoints
The Unbroken Chain: IoT Data for Continuous Cold Chain Monitoring
More Advantech
Latest in Logistics
Union Pacific-Norfolk Southern merger application is filed with the Surface Transportation Board
FedEx posts fiscal first quarter earnings growth
U.S. rail carload and intermodal volumes are down, for week ending December 15, reports AAR
DAT’s November Truckload Volume Index sees more mixed results
November intermodal volumes see annual decline, reports IANA
Looking at the state of the parcel market with Robert Persuit, Sr. Director of Business Development, ShipMatrix
Teamsters Rail Conference makes its case for the Union Pacific-Norfolk Southern proposed merger to not be approved by the STB
More Logistics