Cost Pressure in EU Logistics puts Fleet Safety in the Spotlight
- New Continental White Paper shows how digital tire management improves reliability and cost efficiency for European fleets
- Digital tire monitoring supports preventive maintenance and helps reduce unplanned downtime
Hanover, Germany, May 5, 2026. Persistently high fuel prices and ongoing geopolitical uncertainty continue to shape operating conditions for logistics companies across the European Union. For fleets operating cross‑border services and long‑haul routes, volatile energy costs and tight delivery schedules allow little tolerance for unplanned disruption. Against this backdrop, Continental has published a new White Paper, “Enhancing Fleet Reliability Through Digital Tire Management – Safety by Continental,” examining how EU fleets can reduce operational risk and improve reliability by focusing on one of the most safety‑critical yet often underestimated components: tires.
Safety as a Business Critical Factor
As cost pressure increases, many logistics operators are reassessing areas where operational risks can still be actively reduced. Vehicle safety – particularly the condition of safety‑relevant components such as tires – is increasingly viewed, not only as a compliance requirement, but as a factor directly influencing efficiency, uptime, and cost control. Tires play a central role in vehicle stability, braking performance, and fuel consumption. However, pressure deviations and heat build‑up often develop gradually and can remain undetected between manual inspections. When tire issues escalate on the road, they can lead to breakdowns, delivery delays, and costly roadside interventions – challenges that are especially disruptive in EU‑wide logistics operations.
From Reactive to Predictive Maintenance
The White Paper highlights a growing shift among European fleets toward continuous, data‑driven approaches to tire safety. Rather than reacting to failures, fleet operators are increasingly relying on digital monitoring systems to detect risks early and integrate tire condition into planned maintenance processes.Continental’s ContiConnect digital tire management system is presented as one example of how this shift can be implemented in practice. By continuously monitoring tire pressure and temperature via sensors installed inside the tire, the system provides fleet‑wide visibility and automated alerts when values move outside defined thresholds – enabling intervention before issues result in en‑route incidents.
Evidence From Real World Fleet Operations
Drawing on real‑world fleet experience, the White Paper documents how continuous tire monitoring can lead to measurable improvements in demanding transport environments, including significantly fewer tire‑related breakdowns, improved fuel efficiency through optimized tire pressure, and extended tire service life. For logistics operators working across multiple EU countries, these improvements support more predictable routes, fewer unplanned stops, and increased delivery reliability – key advantages in complex, time‑critical supply chains.
Safety as Part of Operational Risk Management
While fleet operators have limited influence over fuel prices or geopolitical developments, the White Paper emphasizes that safety‑critical asset management remains fully within their control. As cost pressure persists across the European logistics sector, tire safety is increasingly becoming part of a broader operational risk‑management strategy. By making tire condition transparent and actionable, digital tire management helps embed safety into everyday fleet operations – supporting stable, efficient, and resilient operation in a challenging environment.
The White Paper “Enhancing Fleet Reliability Through Digital Tire Management – Safety by Continental” is available for download at: Safety by Continental

Annette Rojas
Business Area Replacement Tires EMEA
Spokesperson Commercial Vehicle Tires
Continental Tires


