26.04.2012 - The UPU
continues to refine its data collection on the environmental impact of postal
activities, thanks to expanded surveys and better cooperation with member
countries and international organizations.
Annually, hundreds of thousands of postal
workers make their rounds on foot or on some 730,000 bicycles, covering 6
billion kilometres with no carbon footprint (Photo: Deutsche Post DHL)
According to its third
global inventory on greenhouse-gas emissions, Posts around the world generated
an estimated 56.5 million tonnes of carbon dioxide in 2010. This represents
0.15 per cent of the 38 billion tonnes of CO2 generated annually worldwide.
As a comparison, the
maritime sector produces 3.3 per cent of total global emissions or 1.02 billion
tonnes of CO2. The aviation sector produces 2.2 per cent of total emissions or
705 million tonnes.
Postal picture
Posts in North, South
and Central America, Western Europe, South Asia and Oceania account for 95.5
per cent of the greenhouse gases produced by UPU member countries. Posts in
Africa, Eastern Europe and North Asia, account for only 4.5 per cent of the
sector’s emissions.
The latest global
inventory collected data from 133 member countries and the International Post
Corporation, a private-industry association, and PostEurop, a UPU restricted
union.
For the first time, the 2010 inventory took
into account emissions from rail and sea transport. Individual results were
communicated confidentially to each country to encourage postal operators to
reduce their emissions.
Alternative vehicles
Much of the postal
sector’s carbon footprint is generated by its fleet of over one million
vehicles. However, the use of electric and hybrid vehicles is on the rise among
Posts, particularly in Europe and North America.
Others, such as
Mauritius Post, have focused on streamlining their delivery routes to minimise
environmental impact.
In Mauritius’s case, this was in response to
the calculation of its carbon emissions in the first UPU inventory. It reduced
the number of route circuits from 22 to 16, grouping together a number of
offices in one large distribution centre.
The Post also
decreased the number of delivery offices from 90 to 47.
“A reduction in the
mileage and fuel consumption of our postal vehicles led to a 25 per cent drop
in CO2 emissions generated by our fleet,” said Giandev Moteea, Mauritius Post’s
CEO.
For the next inventory
on 2011, the UPU is cooperating with the International Civil Aviation
Organization to gain a view of emissions stemming from airmail.
Source : UPU
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