Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cutting emissions by 40%, postmaster says

- DAVID SHARP Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by John Magsam of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

The U.S. Postal Service announced sweeping plans last week to reduce greenhouse emissions by diverting more parcels from air to ground transporta­tion, boosting the number of electric vehicles, cutting waste sent to landfills and making delivery routes more efficient.

Postmaster General Louis DeJoy described a mix of environmen­tal initiative­s and cost-cutting business practices that together would combine to reduce the Postal Service’s contributi­on to planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions by 40% by 2030, meeting the Biden administra­tion environmen­tal goals in the process.

“We reduce costs, we reduce carbon. It’s very much hand in hand,” said DeJoy, who acknowledg­ed being impatient with the pace of change, including the rollout of electric vehicles.

All told, the Postal Service intends to save $5 billion by consolidat­ing smaller facilities into larger sorting and processing hubs that eliminate thousands of trips a day, along with operationa­l changes such as modernizin­g facilities and reducing outsourced work, officials said.

Those efficiency-driven changes can help the environmen­t in reducing carbon emissions by eliminatin­g wasteful activities, in addition to electric vehicles and other efforts.

“These initiative­s represent the strongest and most aggressive actions the Postal Service has ever taken to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” said Jennifer Beiro-Reveille, the organizati­on’s senior director of environmen­tal affairs and corporate sustainabi­lity.

The Postal Service’s announceme­nt follows criticism that it was moving too slowly in reducing emissions from one of the largest fleets of civilian vehicles in the world.

But efforts picked up steam after the approval of $3 billion in funding for electric vehicles and charging infrastruc­ture under a landmark climate and health policy adopted by Congress.

Katherine Garcia from the Sierra Club, which previously sued the Postal Service before its decision to boost the volume of electric vehicle purchases, said the new direction shows electric vehicles are good for both business and the environmen­t.

“Their leadership will really move the needle in terms of the clean energy transition across the country,” said Garcia, the organizati­on’s Clean Transporta­tion for All Campaign director.

Last month, the Postal Service unveiled new EVs and charging stations at a new distributi­on center in Georgia, one of many updated sorting and delivery centers that is opening. Workers may have to drive farther to work at a new facility, but there are no plans to cut jobs, DeJoy said.

The Postal Service plans to take delivery of 66,000 electric vehicles over five years. That includes about 10,000 vehicles from Ford this year and a handful of next-generation delivery vehicles by year’s end from Oshkosh, which won a contract to convert the fleet of aging vehicles. The bulk of the deliveries from Oshkosh won’t come until the 2026-2028 period, he said.

Electric vehicle maker Canoo, which has manufactur­ing operations in Oklahoma, said in late January that the the U.S. Postal Service has plans to purchase six of its vehicles. Canoo said it will deliver the right-hand drive LDV 190 models sometime in the first quarter.

Postal carriers have been soldiering on with overworked delivery trucks that went into service between 1987 to 1994. But not everyone is thrilled by the focus on electric vehicles.

Craig Stevens from the group Grow America’s Infrastruc­ture Now questioned the cost of EVs and infrastruc­ture. He also cast doubt on their effectiven­ess in colder climates, citing a recent bout of extreme cold in the Midwest that hampered EVs there.

“How will Americans living in cold climates rely on the USPS if their delivery trucks don’t work in cold weather?” the spokespers­on wrote in a statement.

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