FedEx Founder Fred Smith Believes Twin 33s Will Win Approval

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Securing America’s Future Energy

WASHINGTON — Fred Smith, founder and chairman of FedEx Corp., said he believes nationwide use of 33-foot twin trailers can gain approval during the next presidential administration.

“We don’t think there is any chance 33-foot trailers will be approved until there is a new administration, but we think it will eventually because they are safer, more environmentally friendly and they save tremendous amounts of fuel,” Smith said.

Smith made the comments during a media roundtable here May 19 just before the release of an updated report from the Securing America’s Future Energy group, of which he is co-chairman.

The 170-page document outlined a series of environmental and technological steps the United States should take to further reduce its dependence on oil. Gaining approval of twin 33s was one goal stated in the heavy-truck section of the report.



For a portion of 2015, it appeared twin 33s would gain federal approval. However, the provision ultimately was left out of the final version of a large fiscal 2016 spending bill.

“We think this was a huge missed opportunity and, as in most things in Washington, it is very easy to stop something and very hard to get something done,” Smith said.

Explaining his position during the media briefing, he said the entire parcel delivery and less-than-truckload sectors, “without exception,” wanted to move to 33-footers and that FedEx already runs them in Florida and a few other areas.

“Adoption of the 33-foot standard would have saved 130 million gallons of diesel fuel a year, reduced emissions by thousands of tons of carbon every year and reduced the number of accidents on the road by a tremendous amount,” Smith said.

He added that they are “more stable” than the 28-footers. “The drivers like them better because they don’t drift in the wind when they are empty.”

Smith also had harsh criticism for advocacy groups that lobbied against them.

“The ‘safety advocates,’ not one of whom operates a truck or knows what it is like to get that call at 5 a.m. when there has been an accident, somehow felt 33-footers were ‘unsafe, ’ ” he said.

Smith made his comments just days after FedEx Freight CEO Michael Ducker participated in a May 16 kickoff event for Infrastructure Week event and called on Congress to authorize the use of twin 33-foot trailers as a “creative solution” to help the nation’s declining condition of roads and bridges.