Willingness to wait is often promoted as a path towards more sustainable e-commerce deliveries, yet its impact depends on how firms use the operational flexibility it creates. We analyze two approaches: concentrating deliveries to minimize route distance versus spreading deliveries to smooth peaks and minimize fleet size. We adopt a strategic modeling approach that captures the flexibility created by customers’ willingness to wait and uses continuous route-length approximations to estimate total route distance and fleet requirements. Using e-commerce delivery data from the Netherlands, we find that concentrating deliveries yields substantial distance savings only at very high willingness-to-wait levels and requires much larger fleets, whereas spreading deliveries can reduce fleet size with only a modest increase in distance. Once life-cycle emissions of the delivery fleet are considered, spreading deliveries can therefore lower CO 2 emissions, whereas concentrating deliveries can increase them.
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Marith J. Zeelenberg
Onur A. Kilic
Paul Buijs
Transportation Research Part D Transport and Environment
University of Groningen
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Zeelenberg et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69e320cc40886becb653ff09 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trd.2026.105349