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Economic Development

Award-winning parcel innovator taps into university logistics expertise to prove green credentials

IParcelBox worked with the Logistics Institute at University of Hull to develop carbon mapping tool

Home delivery - easy in lockdown but with the world back open missed parcels lead to increased journeys. (Image: University of Hull / IParcelBox)

An award-winning East Yorkshire start-up has partnered with University of Hull to develop a new online tool to help deliveries go green.

The brainchild of Elloughton’s Paul Needler - ‘the accidental entrepreneur’ who won the Innovation and Technology Award at the Hull Live Business Awards 2021 - IParcelBox is a smart residential parcel delivery locker, providing a time-saving solution to missed courier calls.

With increasing online purchases seen as ecommerce evolves - accerelated massively by the pandemic when we were home to colect - environmental concerns are now being studied. Having established the technology, now rolling out, the surveyor who spent much of his working life in London before returning north to develop his patented product, was keen to find out whether delivery to door or a pick-up point was more sustainable, avoiding repeat calls.

Read more: Don't miss your chance to enter Hull Live Business Awards 2022

A carbon mapping of e-commerce deliveries has been created, with a calculator which gives both retailers and customers a fair and unbiased comparison of the footprint of different options, enabling buyers to make informed decisions as to which delivery method is the greenest.

Mr Needler said: “It’s great that consumers will finally have access to a simple tool they can use to make informed decisions about how to minimise the emissions associated with parcel deliveries, backed up with EU-funded academic research.

“For a large proportion of the population where collection involves either a dedicated vehicle journey or an extra leg to an existing trip, they may be surprised to find that at-home delivery to a secure location such as iParcelBox could be the greenest option.”

He has seen how courier companies are encouraging customers to get their parcels delivered to local hubs, such as pick-up points or lockers, enabling them to claim lower emissions for the last leg of the delivery process. However, depending on the location, such claims of environmental benefits ignore the fact that the customer will still have to collect. This could involve a further journey if not within a short distance – a particular issue for out-of-town online-shoppers for whom walking, cycling or public transport may not be an option.