Transportation Efficiency Index Calculator

Analyze payload use, schedule discipline, and energy intensity. Spot inefficiencies across fleets, routes, and operations. Use weighted inputs for clearer transport planning and control.

Enter transportation system data

Name the fleet, route, lane, or service being studied.
Use route distance for one trip, not total cycle distance.
Enter the number of loaded or evaluated trips.
Average transported mass or payload equivalent per trip.
Use maximum practical carrying capacity under normal service.
Use achieved average speed over the measured route.
Benchmark or design speed used for comparison.
Enter percentage of trips delivered on time.
Include damaged, lost, or unusable transported output.
Measured productive service hours during the study period.
Scheduled service hours available for transport operation.
Use total traction fuel or electrical energy for all trips.
Include driver, maintenance, toll, and operating cost elements.
Use greenhouse gas emissions for the same evaluation period.
MJ per ton-km target from prior best performance.
Cost per ton-km target for comparison.
kg CO2e per ton-km benchmark for best practice.

Weighting model

Weights can sum to any positive total because the calculator normalizes them automatically.

Reset

Example data table

Parameter Example value
System nameRegional Freight Corridor
Distance per trip180 km
Actual average load16 tons
Rated capacity20 tons
Trips completed3
Actual average speed62 km/h
Target speed70 km/h
On-time performance94%
Operational hours10.5 h
Planned hours11 h
Total energy used5900 MJ
Total operating cost1600
Total emissions420 kg CO2e
Damage or loss rate1.2%
Benchmark energy intensity0.75 MJ/ton-km
Benchmark cost intensity0.22 per ton-km
Benchmark emission intensity0.05 kg/ton-km
Default weighted resultTransportation Efficiency Index ≈ 97.03

Formula used

Transport work

TW = Distance × Actual Load × Trips

Intensity metrics

Actual Energy Intensity = Energy Used ÷ TW
Actual Cost Intensity = Total Cost ÷ TW
Actual Emission Intensity = Total Emissions ÷ TW

Normalized scores

Load Score = Actual Load ÷ Capacity
Speed Score = Actual Speed ÷ Target Speed
Schedule Score = On-Time Percent ÷ 100
Availability Score = Operational Hours ÷ Planned Hours
Energy Score = Benchmark Energy Intensity ÷ Actual Energy Intensity
Cost Score = Benchmark Cost Intensity ÷ Actual Cost Intensity
Emission Score = Benchmark Emission Intensity ÷ Actual Emission Intensity
Quality Score = 1 - Damage Rate

Transportation Efficiency Index

TEI = [Σ(Weight × Score) ÷ Σ(Weights)] × 100

Each score is capped at 125% to prevent one unusually strong metric from overpowering the full engineering picture. A TEI near 100 indicates overall alignment with benchmark expectations. Values above 100 show performance beyond the benchmark mix, while lower values reveal inefficiency, underuse, or weak service control.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter the system name so results can be identified in exports.
  2. Provide route distance, average load, rated capacity, and number of trips.
  3. Enter actual speed, target speed, on-time performance, and damage rate.
  4. Input operational hours, planned hours, total energy, cost, and emissions.
  5. Enter benchmark intensity values from internal standards or best historical runs.
  6. Adjust the weighting model if your engineering team values certain outcomes more heavily.
  7. Press Calculate Index to place the result above the form.
  8. Review the factor breakdown and use the export buttons for CSV or PDF output.

Frequently asked questions

1) What does the Transportation Efficiency Index show?

It shows how well a route or fleet converts capacity, time, energy, cost, and service quality into useful transport output against selected benchmarks.

2) What does a score of 100 mean?

A score near 100 means the weighted average performance is matching the benchmark set you entered for energy, cost, emissions, and service targets.

3) Can this be used for passenger systems?

Yes. Replace tons with a consistent passenger-equivalent load basis and keep benchmark intensities in matching units for meaningful comparisons.

4) Why are weights included?

Weights let engineers prioritize what matters most. A city operator may emphasize punctuality, while a freight carrier may emphasize energy and cost.

5) Why are some scores capped?

The cap prevents one unusually favorable metric from masking weak performance elsewhere. It keeps the index balanced and easier to interpret.

6) What benchmark values should I use?

Use internal best-case data, design targets, contractual targets, or reliable peer baselines. The benchmark should reflect realistic, defensible performance goals.

7) Does this replace detailed simulation?

No. It is a screening and monitoring tool. Use it to compare systems quickly, then investigate weak factors with deeper engineering analysis.

8) How should I improve a low score?

Start with the lowest weighted factor scores. Common fixes include better loading, route redesign, reduced idle time, stronger maintenance, and tighter schedule control.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.