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Academy / Beginners

πŸ“¦ Freight Environmental Impact

5 min read β€” by Charles Dubouix

Freight: A Major Contributor to Global Emissions

Freight transport accounts for approximately 7% of global COβ‚‚ emissions and more than 30% of all transport-related COβ‚‚. As the backbone of global trade, freight connects supply chains across continents β€” but at a significant environmental cost.

Emissions by Transport Mode

Not all modes of transport are created equal when it comes to carbon intensity. Here’s how they compare:

🚒 Maritime Freight

Maritime transport handles 70% of global freight traffic (in tonne-kilometres) but accounts for 37% of freight emissions. It remains the most carbon-efficient mode for long-distance, high-volume shipments, but its sheer scale makes it a significant contributor overall.

πŸš› Road Freight

Road transport carries only 18% of freight traffic yet is responsible for a disproportionate 53% of freight emissions. The carbon intensity of trucking is much higher per tonne-kilometre than maritime or rail, making it a priority target for decarbonization.

✈️ Air Freight

Air freight represents less than 1% of freight traffic but generates 7% of freight emissions. In terms of carbon intensity, air freight emits approximately 50 times more COβ‚‚e per tonne-kilometre than maritime transport.

πŸš† Rail Freight

Rail is one of the most efficient modes, with low carbon intensity per tonne-kilometre β€” especially when electrified. However, its share of global freight remains limited by infrastructure availability.

ModeShare of TrafficShare of EmissionsRelative COβ‚‚e Intensity
Maritime~70%~37%1Γ— (baseline)
Road~18%~53%~10Γ—
Air<1%~7%~50Γ—
Rail~11%~3%~1–2Γ—

A Growing Challenge

Global freight demand is expected to double by 2050. Without significant action, freight emissions could increase by 22% or more over the same period. This makes decarbonization of freight not just an environmental imperative but a strategic business priority.

πŸ”‘ Key Takeaways

The disparity between traffic share and emission share is stark: road and air freight are disproportionately carbon-intensive. With demand set to double, shippers must act now β€” through better measurement and targeted reduction strategies.

What’s Next?

Learn how to accurately measure your freight emissions in the next course: How to Measure Freight Emissions?