IPC publishes 2018 UNEX CEN module results

LinkedIn +

IPC has published its UNEX CEN module results for 2018, revealing that over 50% of international priority and first-class letter mail within Europe was delivered within two days of posting; 78.7% within three days; and 94.4% within five days, with an average delivery time of 2.7 days. These results cover a total of 32 countries – the 28 EU Member States together with Iceland, Norway, Serbia and Switzerland.

The 2018 performance levels are below the European Union’s speed objective of 85% of intra-EU mail delivery (delivery within three days of posting), and its reliability objective of 97% (delivery within five days of posting).

The results for 2018 from the UNEX CEN module are based on a total 62,000 test letters sent and received by 900 volunteers spread across 32 countries participating in the measurement. Overall, 774 country-to-country flows were measured.

The IPC’s UNEX mail monitoring system measures quality of service performance for end-to-end cross-border priority letter mail. The measured transit times cover the whole process from posting in the origin country to delivery to the final addressee in the destination country, including the time for collection, sorting and transportation.

These test letters are representative of real mail in terms of mail formats, induction and franking methods, delivery methods and geographical spread within each of the measured European countries. More than 40% of the test letters contained radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, which are recorded by the RFID readers as they pass through the postal facilities.

The UNEX results 2018 brochure is available here.

Share this story:

About Author

mm
, editor

With over a decade of experience as a business and technology journalist working in B2B publishing, Hazel first joined UKi in 2011. After taking 18 months off to bring up her daughter and try her hand at marketing copywriting, she returned in January 2018 to do what she loves best – magazine editing! She is now the editor of UKi's Passenger Terminal World and Parcel and Postal Technology International magazines.




Comments are closed.