Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Big UPS Order for NG Tractors Follows 300 Million Successful ‘Green’ Miles

United Parcel Service is so committed to using low-emissions fuels that all of the 700 Class 8 vehicles it has ordered for delivery late this year and into 2014 will run on liquefied natural gas.

Tom Berg
Tom BergFormer Senior Contributing Editor
Read Tom's Posts
June 26, 2013
Big UPS Order for NG Tractors Follows 300 Million Successful ‘Green’ Miles

At the ACT Expo in Washington, D.C., Mack displayed a Pinnacle tractor like the 122 just ordered by UPS. It has a Cummins ISX12 G engine that runs on liquefied natural gas instead of compressed NG.

3 min to read


At the ACT Expo in Washington, D.C., Mack displayed a Pinnacle tractor like the 122 just ordered by UPS. It has a Cummins ISX12 G engine that runs on liquefied natural gas instead of compressed NG.

United Parcel Service is so committed to using low-emissions fuels that all of the 700 Class 8 vehicles it has ordered for delivery late this year and into 2014 will run on liquefied natural gas. The order follows five years and 300 million miles of successful experience with 2,700 trucks and package cars fueled by natural gas, said David Abney, chief operating officer of the giant package carrier and logistics company.
 
But one of the things UPS managers learned in those 300 million “green” miles is that “the greenest miles are the ones you never run,” he commented. The company uses computerized route planning and a “smart pick-up” system based on communications with customers to avoid needless miles.
 
“There was a time when we used to stop everywhere every day, even if there were no pick ups” from regular customers, related Abney, who began his career with UPS as a part-time loader and later worked as a route driver. “Those days are gone.” About 364 million miles were saved in 2011 and ’12.
 
UPS has worked with natural gas since 1989, and now has about 3,000 alternative-fuel trucks among the 90,000 it runs worldwide, Abney told an audience at the Alternative Clean Transportation Expo in Washington, D.C. , on Wednesday morning. In addition to about 1,000 package cars running on compressed natural gas, it also has some on propane, others with diesel-electric hybrids, and still others with electric-drive powertrains.
 
Altogether, UPS expects to cover 500 million green miles by 2015 and 1 billion by 2017. To help support that, it plans to build nine LNG fueling stations this year and next.
 
The 700 LNG road tractors will use dual-fuel gas-and-diesel vehicles from Cummins Westport and Kenworth, as well as straight-gas engines, the latter spark-ignited Cummins models in Mack chassis.  These are the first Macks built with Cummins’ ISX12 G engines that are fueled by LNG instead of CNG, a Mack source said.
 
The Mack order follows a test of one tractor in regular service in Greensboro, N.C., a Mack announcement said. It has been running two 350- to 400-mile shifts per day, pulling single-semi and doubles combinations grossing up to 80,000 pounds. The 11.9-liter ISX12 G is rated at 400 horsepower and 1,450 pounds-feet, which has proven sufficient for such road duty.
 
Abney said UPS pays about $100,000 extra for a natural-gas-fueled road tractor. That premium is paid off because gas is cheaper than diesel and the tractors run high miles over which high amounts of the cheaper fuel are used.
 
UPS and other fleets might buy more such vehicles except for the penalty of taxation, he said. Some of those upcharges are the 12% federal excise tax on the extra gas equipment, which he thinks the government should exempt to encourage use of the clean-burning fuel.
 
And the federal road tax on LNG amounts to 17 cents per gallon extra, because it’s taxed as a liquid, like diesel, even though it has less energy than diesel. LNG should be taxed on its energy content, not its liquid volume, Abney said.

More Fuel Smarts

NACFE Run on Less 2026 findings.
Fuel Smartsby Jack RobertsMay 1, 2026

NACFE: Fleets Need to Recalibrate TCO Strategies as Electric Trucks Gain a Long-Term Edge

NACFE’s Run on Less data has found that recent setbacks aside, electric truck powertrains are trending toward market leadership by 2025.

Read More →
Gray Volvo tractor pulling trailer on open highway
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeMay 1, 2026

New High-Horsepower Natural Gas Engine Could Expand Fleet Options

Westport and Volvo are demonstrating a 500-hp truck with diesel-like efficiency — one that also offers what Westport says is a better pathway to using hydrogen fuel in trucks.

Read More →
Illustration with oil wells silhouetted against red and gold sky
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeMay 1, 2026

Why Fuel Diversification Matters for Trucking Fleets

Relying on diesel alone exposes fleets to fuel price volatility. Here’s why diversification with electric, natural gas, and renewable fuels can reduce risk.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Range Energy eTrailer.
Fuel Smartsby News/Media ReleaseApril 17, 2026

Range Energy Confirms eTrailer Performance in Winter Testing as Commercial Rollout Nears

Range Energy said its production-ready eTrailer system proved it can boost stability, safety, and efficiency in sub-zero winter conditions as the company moves toward scaled deployment.

Read More →
Circles with trucks demonstrating sustainable features and Top Green Fleets logo
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 16, 2026

Top Green Fleets of 2026: Nomination Deadline Extended

Is your company a leader in sustainability efforts among trucking fleets? If so, Heavy Duty Trucking's editors want to hear from you.

Read More →
Youtube thumbnail featuring man in Big-Lebowski-inspired sweater
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 13, 2026

New Lightweight Wheel Cover Targets Simpler Aero Gains [Watch]

Watch to learn how Deflecktor's new wheel cover design is taking a simpler approach to aerodynamics, with an eye toward making it more practical for both trucks and trailers.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Dual truck tires with black aerodynamic wheel cover and a man bending down getting ready to take one off
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 10, 2026

Deflecktor: Hubbub Aerodynamic Wheel Cover Cost-Effective Even for Trailers

Aerodynamic wheel covers can deliver small but meaningful fuel-economy gains for fleets, and Deflecktor says its latest design aims to make the technology easier and more affordable to deploy.

Read More →
Podcast thumbnail saying "How to Save on Fuel Costs" with diesel pump in the background and photo of the woman guest
Fuel SmartsApril 9, 2026

Cutting Fleet Fuel Costs in a Volatile Market [Listen]

When diesel prices are as volatile as they've been in 2026, it makes it tough for trucking fleets to plan and control costs. Breakthrough Fuel's Jenny Vander Zanden has insights on near-term savings strategies.

Read More →
YouTube thumbnail saying "How to Save on Fuel Costs" with woman's photo and a photo of a diesel price pump
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 9, 2026

Diesel Price Swings Aren’t Over. What Can Your Fleet Do?

Practical steps fleets can take to manage fuel costs, from purchasing strategies to driver behavior.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Illustration with oil wells, dollar bills, and a diesel fuel pump
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeApril 7, 2026

Diesel Prices Surge Toward Record Highs as Oil Price Volatility Intensifies

Prices jumped another 24 cents in a week, with California topping $7.50 and new data showing fleet fuel costs may already be at record levels.

Read More →