Logistics and freight leaders in the United Kingdom are stepping up collaboration with government and energy stakeholders through participation in the Freight Energy Forum, an industry–government body established to guide the transition of the freight sector toward net‑zero emissions and future energy infrastructure planning. The Forum — created as part of the UK’s Future of Freight plan — brings together representatives from across transport modes, energy suppliers, and logistics trade organisations to tackle long‑term decarbonisation and power‑supply challenges.
Chaired by senior officials from the Department for Transport (DfT), the Freight Energy Forum includes members from energy networks, freight associations and logistics groups representing road haulage, ports, warehousing and rail. Its mandate is to analyse current and future energy demand for freight and identify where energy infrastructure is needed — from charging points for electrified fleets to grid capacity at depots and terminals — so that the UK can accelerate sustainable freight operations.
A key focus of the initiative is to map energy requirements across all logistics modes and support the roll‑out of zero‑carbon energy infrastructure. Early work has involved roundtable discussions on future road freight energy demand — where industry and energy partners examined the scale of electrification infrastructure needed as the sector transitions away from fossil fuels.
Logistics trade bodies have emphasised that integrating logistics energy needs into national planning is essential to avoid “capacity shocks” as more commercial vehicles electrify and to ensure public charging networks, depot power and grid enhancements keep pace with demand. The Forum’s work is expected to inform policy and support investment decisions that help decarbonise freight without compromising operational reliability.
By bridging government objectives and private‑sector logistics expertise, the Freight Energy Forum aims to create a coordinated approach to energy infrastructure that supports the UK’s net‑zero goals while sustaining the competitiveness and resilience of its freight supply chains.
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