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In reply to the discussion: The average 18 wheeler loaded at 80,000 lbs gets about 7 miles per gallon. [View all]FarCenter
(19,429 posts)6. Frozen bagged vegetables may have a smaller carbon footprint than fresh at a farmer's market
Harvested, processed, and frozen in bulk near the farm, and shipped in bulk via refrigerated truck or rail container, they are fairly efficient.
Small amounts of vegetables transported 10s of miles from a local farm in a pickup or box truck may actually use more fuel per pound of produce sold, particularly if unsold produce is discarded.
The same goes for fresh vegetables in a supermarket. The fresh peas in a pod may have a bigger carbon footprint that bagged frozen peas. This is especially true if the fresh peas are not in season locally.
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The average 18 wheeler loaded at 80,000 lbs gets about 7 miles per gallon. [View all]
livingwagenow
Nov 2013
OP
Frozen bagged vegetables may have a smaller carbon footprint than fresh at a farmer's market
FarCenter
Nov 2013
#6
The truckers I've talked to say the same thing about bigger engines getting
Egalitarian Thug
Nov 2013
#35
How well do these Hybrid diesels scale up to be able to haul 80,000 lb truck cross country?
RC
Nov 2013
#58
People disagree on this point, but after doing some research, I think you're right.
lumberjack_jeff
Nov 2013
#68
It's also much slower than truck and can't get to the places that trucks can. n/t
cynatnite
Nov 2013
#21
I love to buy American and I look for it when I shop. I 'll pay a premium for it.
badtoworse
Nov 2013
#25
Your post is a little misleading. My Freightliner's GVW was 26,000 lbs. That's JUST the tractor.
cherokeeprogressive
Nov 2013
#38
A bigger problem is F-150's that get 15mpg and hold four people are flying off the shelf
taught_me_patience
Nov 2013
#40