Kaya’s Equation Applied to Freight
Originally developed for national energy systems, Kaya’s equation can be adapted to freight transport to identify the key levers for reducing emissions. It decomposes total freight CO₂ into five multiplicative factors:
CO₂ = Transport Demand × Modal Mix × (1 / Load Factor) × Energy Intensity × Carbon Intensity
Each factor represents a lever that shippers and logistics providers can act on.
The 5 Levers for Reducing Freight Emissions
1. Transport Demand
Reducing the total volume of goods transported — or the distance they travel. This includes strategies like nearshoring (sourcing closer to markets), consolidating shipments, and optimizing supply chain design to minimize unnecessary movements.
2. Modal Shift
Switching from high-emission modes to lower-emission alternatives. The highest-impact shifts are:
- Air → Sea — Reducing emissions by up to 50×
- Road → Rail — Reducing emissions by 3–5×
- Road → Inland waterways — Significant reductions for suitable routes
3. Load Factor
Maximizing the utilization of each vehicle, vessel, or aircraft. A fully loaded truck emits roughly the same as a half-empty one, so improving load factor effectively halves the emission per tonne transported.
4. Energy Efficiency
Improving the energy consumption of transport assets through better vehicle design, speed optimization, route optimization, and reducing the number of stopovers.
5. Carbon Energy Intensity
Switching to lower-carbon fuels and energy sources: biofuels, synthetic fuels, LNG, SAF (Sustainable Aviation Fuel), electric vehicles, and hydrogen. This is one of the most promising long-term levers. Learn more in the Alternative Fuels course.
🎯 Priority Levers
For most shippers, the two highest-impact levers are modal shift (especially air→sea and road→rail) and carbon energy intensity (alternative fuels). Other quick wins include load factor optimization, reducing stopovers, and nearshoring where feasible.
Putting It All Together
Effective freight decarbonization combines multiple levers simultaneously. A shipper might shift some air freight to sea, optimize truck loads for road shipments, and invest in SAF for remaining air cargo — achieving cumulative reductions across their entire supply chain.
What’s Next?
Continue your learning journey with our advanced courses on Carbon Neutrality, Carbon Offsetting, and Alternative Fuels.