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Aggressive Initiatives Save Fuel At UPS Airlines


WEBWIRE

Conservation Program Also Improves Environmental Performance

LOUISVILLE, Oct. 27, 2005 – Automobile drivers may be feeling the pinch at the gas pump, but try fueling the world’s ninth-largest airline. That task has prompted UPS to accelerate a fuel conservation program that’s now saving more than US$1 million each month in fuel costs while reducing the airline’s impact on the environment.

"Since we fly more than 265 heavy jet aircraft, environmental concerns have always been factored into the operation of UPS Airlines" said Capt. Tom Olson, UPS Flight Operations fuel manager. "But in today’s world of rising prices, it’s more critical than ever to operate efficiently. Our fuel conservation initiatives are innovative as well as environmentally friendly"

Olson’s role is to constantly re-examine how the airline operates, looking for additional ways to reduce fuel consumption and manage purchases. As a result, UPS has implemented several new procedures, including:

* Reducing the amount of extra fuel carried by aircraft.
* Using only one engine during taxiing.
* Having more UPS airplanes use electrical power from buildings and in-ground electrical hook-ups instead of the aircraft’s auxiliary power unit, which is powered by fuel.
* And slowing down flights to the most fuel efficient speed possible if it doesn’t change an arrival time critical to making service commitments.

Fuel conservation long has been a priority at the UPS Airlines. Worldport, UPS’s all-points international air hub in Louisville, was designed to reduce fuel consumption and emissions. Aircraft park directly at the floor level of the facility, which significantly reduces the need to operate ground support equipment, reducing fuel use and emissions.

UPS Airlines also is the first U.S.-based carrier to use the Lufthansa Systems Lido Operations Center, a computerized flight planning system that calculates the most efficient route between two points based on weather, winds, terrain and other factors.

And UPS flight planners for years have considered fuel prices around the world when determining where to fuel the company’s aircraft each day. Planners use a formula to calculate the costs and determine whether the price is right.

In addition to such efforts, UPS is testing some additional options, including:

* Continuous descent approach, or CDA. Continuous descent approach is an alternative to the normal aviation practice of stepping down altitudes as you approach an airport for landing. Test programs are underway at airports in Louisville and Sacramento, Calif. With CDA, planes use idle power to glide down, which makes less noise, burns less fuel and creates fewer emissions. UPS expects to obtain operational approval from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to implement CDA for several flights into Louisville by the end of the year.

* In coordination with the FAA, UPS is testing Automatic Dependent Surveillance - Broadcast (ADS-B) technology on 104 of UPS’s 757 and 767 aircraft. Among other things, this technology allows UPS to proactively manage aircraft departure queues instead of relying solely on air traffic controllers, which in turn reduces fuel use and emissions. UPS has the world’s only fleet equipped with this advanced technology.

"UPS customers benefit from our ability to carefully manage and conserve fuel throughout the business, particularly when prices are surging" said UPS Airline and International Operations Vice President Bob Lekites. "We believe our customers recognize and appreciate UPS’s commitment to efficient operations"

UPS is the world’s largest package delivery company and a global leader in supply chain services, offering an extensive range of options for synchronizing the movement of goods, information and funds. Headquartered in Atlanta, Ga., UPS serves more than 200 countries and territories worldwide. UPS’s stock trades on the New York Stock Exchange (UPS), and the company can be found on the Web at UPS.com.



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