How to monitor fuel consumption and idle time with real-time data

Published: 2022-03-22
Written by: Linn Björklund

Share this post with others:

Image

As petrol and diesel prices reach new record levels, fuel costs make up a rapidly growing share of the total operating costs for companies in fuel-intensive industries. Monitoring your fuel consumption and idle time is the first and most important step towards cutting your fuel costs, as well as reducing your CO2 emissions. Make sure you have the right tools to collect and utilise real-time data from your fleet and machinery.

Apart from the obvious incentive of reducing unnecessary consumption and idle time due to high fuel costs, there are also other financial factors to take into account. For example, the second-hand value of any vehicle or machinery quickly decreases with every hour it’s been running – regardless of whether those hours were spent productively or not. Service costs are also based on running time. And if your company has the intention of replacing equipment, vehicles, or machinery after a certain amount of running time, you’ll want those hours to span over as many years as possible.

Image
Best practice
How to reduce operating costs through frontline digitization

With the right digital tools in place, you will significantly lower the operating costs of your business. In this 5 step guide, you’ll learn the best way to transition from substandard reporting to implementing the right digital tools for your business.

Let the data show you where there’s room for improvement

Private cars are often fitted with stop-start systems that shut down the engine automatically after a certain time to reduce idling. Similar solutions are being used for heavy machinery in some industrial production facilities, but are still far less common. Although removing idle time completely within a company isn’t a realistic goal, excessive idling due to thoughtlessness can be reduced significantly. But before you can change the behaviour of your staff, you need the right data to know where there’s room for improvement. By monitoring your fleet and visualising the data, you’ll be able to establish your fuel consumption baseline and detect any deviations from the expected pattern.

CheckProof admin view

How well are you monitoring the fuel consumption and idle time of your fleet today?

While some companies already have a reasonably accurate view of their fuel consumption and idle time data, others still have a long way to go. To evaluate how well your business is performing in this area, ask yourself the following questions:

  • Do you know the average fuel consumption in your organisation – per site and per vehicle/machine?
  • Do you know how much of your fleet’s total running time is made up of idling?
  • Do your drivers and machine operators report their refuelling digitally or on paper?
  • Do you follow up and take action on your fuel consumption and idling data, or are you only collecting it ‘for the sake of it’?

Here’s how to efficiently monitor fuel consumption and idle time

To monitor your fuel consumption and idle time in an efficient way, you need:

  • real-time telematics data from the equipment manufacturer
  • a digital maintenance system, connected through an API, that can visualise the incoming data

With these key elements in place, you’re ready to start measuring. You’ll immediately have complete insight and traceability into when and where each machine or vehicle is refueled, with what volume, and by which staff member (provided that your maintenance system requires your employees to log in with a personal user account). You’ll also be able to compare fuel volumes with mileage to detect waste.

By monitoring your data this way, you’ll be able to establish a benchmark based on the average consumption. This will help you detect and investigate deviations from expected levels. A sudden rise in consumption could be caused by an increase in production, but it could also indicate waste that needs to be dealt with. With the right data in place, you can ask the right questions. You can also compare data from different sites to discover local issues that need addressing – as well as best practices to share with the rest of the organisation.

Share this post with others:

Want to know what CheckProof can do for you?

CheckProof's easy-to-use app makes it easier to do the right thing at the right time. Discover how you can run world-class maintenance that is both cost-effective and sustainable.

Book a demo
Featured image for “Brice Aggregates: What Operational Excellence Looks Like at a Needingworth Quarry”
2026-06-12
Brice Aggregates: What Operational Excellence Looks Like at a Needingworth Quarry
The inaugural CheckProof Industry Excellence Award winners on going digital from the ground up, and the moment their frontline teams bought in.
Featured image for “Why Your FMEA Is Sitting in a Binder (And What It Should Be Doing Instead)”
2026-05-07
Why Your FMEA Is Sitting in a Binder (And What It Should Be Doing Instead)
Most facilities have an FMEA — but it’s collecting dust in a binder instead of driving decisions on the floor. Here’s how to turn your risk analysis into a living tool that actually protects uptime.
Featured image for “CMMS Features and Functionality: What to Look for in a Maintenance Management System”
2026-04-24
CMMS Features and Functionality: What to Look for in a Maintenance Management System
Not all CMMS (Computerized Maintenance Management System) platforms are built the same, and in industries like quarrying, aggregates, cement, and ready-mix concrete, there are certain capabilities that carry more weight than others. The CMMS features that matter most for maintenance teams in asset-intensive industries include things such as centralized asset data, work order automation, preventive and predictive scheduling, digital checklists, deviation management, fleet optimization, and mobile-first design with offline capability.
Featured image for “Cement Plant Inspection Checklist: What to Check, When to Check It, and Why It Fails”
2026-04-24
Cement Plant Inspection Checklist: What to Check, When to Check It, and Why It Fails
Most unplanned shutdowns in a cement plant don’t come out of nowhere. There’s usually a trail beforehand. Maybe a kiln bearing that’s been running 15 degrees above baseline for three weeks, noted by the operator on shift but never formally flagged because it hadn’t tripped an alarm yet. The issue isn’t a lack of warning, its that small deviations are often tolerated until they tip over into something serious.
Featured image for “How to Choose the Right Work Order App for Your Industry”
2026-04-01
How to Choose the Right Work Order App for Your Industry
When something breaks on site, the fix gets most of the attention, but it’s rarely where things go wrong. What’s just as critical is everything around it: who reported it, who picked it up, what got missed between shifts, and how long it sat before anyone acted. In many operations, that whole flow is still held together by paper forms, radio calls, and memory.
Featured image for “Best Practices for Work Order Management”
2026-04-01
Best Practices for Work Order Management
Efficient maintenance starts with clear work orders. When issues are logged quickly with the right details, photos, and priority, teams spend less time chasing information and more time fixing problems. The result is reduced downtime, smoother shift handovers, and audit-ready operations — even in low-signal or harsh environments where mobile work orders let crews flag issues before they escalate.
Featured image for “How DAY Group went paperless and transformed maintenance operations with CheckProof”
2026-03-26
How DAY Group went paperless and transformed maintenance operations with CheckProof
DAY Group Ltd is an independent, family-owned business supplying construction materials and services across the south of England since 1947. Handling over five million tonnes of material annually across divisions including Day Aggregates, Day Glass Recycling, Day Contracting, and Day Equestrian — plus recycling operations processing over 1.5 million tonnes a year — the group operates with close to 200 staff and a large fleet of plant equipment, making uptime, compliance and safety mission-critical.
Featured image for “CONEXPO-CON/AGG 2026 – CheckProof’s Industry Report”
2026-03-17
CONEXPO-CON/AGG 2026 – CheckProof’s Industry Report
CONEXPO-CON/AGG 2026 highlighted an industry laser-focused on execution: demand is strong, but labor, schedules, and downtime risk remain tight. The goal is clear — repeatable performance, early risk visibility, and simpler tech adoption. This report covers the key signals from the show and what they mean for the next era of construction materials.
Featured image for “Standortübergreifende Instandhaltung zum Wettbewerbsvorteil machen”
2026-02-20
Standortübergreifende Instandhaltung zum Wettbewerbsvorteil machen
Gebr. Arweiler, ein familiengeführtes Unternehmen mit mehreren Standorten im Saarland und Frankreich, ist seit langem dafür bekannt, Tradition mit zukunftsorientiertem Handeln zu verbinden. Mit acht Werken, einer LKW-Flotte von 26 LKW´s – darunter auch 5 Elektrofahrzeuge – und dem Engagement für Nachhaltigkeit benötigte das Unternehmen eine digitale Lösung zur Optimierung von Instandhaltung, Anlagenverwaltung und Compliance.
Featured image for “Predictive Maintenance vs Condition-Based Maintenance”
2026-02-12
Predictive Maintenance vs Condition-Based Maintenance
Walk any quarry, plant, or yard and you’ll see the same thing: assets and equipment emitting tell-tale signs of its condition, long before it actually fails. Operators note “sounds off” on a pre-shift, but the note gets buried in a binder or a spreadsheet. The gap between seeing a problem and acting on it at the right time is often where maintenance strategies break down.