The problem worth solving
Family Success Matters relies heavily on vehicles to deliver frontline services to vulnerable communities. Staff travel is essential – but fleet costs, fuel use, and emissions were steadily increasing, at a time when funding certainty and operational efficiency were under pressure.
Like many charities, FSM faced a familiar tension:
- Vehicles were critical to mission delivery
- Budgets were constrained
- Sustainability expectations were rising
Sticking with a traditional fleet model risked higher operating costs, greater exposure to fuel price volatility and rising emissions. None of these outcomes would add value to the organisation’s core purpose.
What changed
FSM partnered with Carbn to rethink how they owned and used their fleet. The business took a stewardship approach, leading the shift on its terms, rather than simply swapping out vehicles.
Key shifts included:
- Initially transitioning the fleet to non-plug-in hybrids, reducing fuel consumption without operational disruption
- Introducing battery electric vehicles (BEVs) as part of a staged journey, once usage patterns and charging readiness were understood
- Buying high-quality, previously leased vehicles at lower cost through Carbn’s Second Life vehicle programme
- Treating fleet decisions as an ongoing process, rather than a fixed procurement cycle
This approach challenged the assumption that charities must choose between affordability and sustainability, demonstrating that both could be improved together.
Results so far
Through this staged transition, FSM has achieved meaningful, measurable outcomes across cost, emissions, and operational resilience.
Key outcomes
- 43% reduction in fleet emissions
- 41% reduction in fuel consumption
- 20% reduction in lease costs
Additional benefits
- Improved cost predictability and lower exposure to fuel price volatility
- Access to newer, safer vehicles without premium pricing
- Reliable, fit-for-purpose vehicles that made life easier for staff
- Alignment with funder and stakeholder expectations around environmental stewardship
All outcomes were delivered while maintaining service continuity and supporting a fleet of about 30 vehicles.
For us, this wasn’t about making a bold statement. It was about making sensible, responsible decisions that protect our mission. By taking a staged approach, we were able to reduce costs and emissions without compromising the work our teams do every day.
Colleen Fakalogotoa, CEO, Family Success Matters
Family Success Matters showed that sustainability and tight budgets are not mutually exclusive. By taking a staged, data-led approach with second-life EVs and flexible subscription terms, they achieved genuine cost savings while future-proofing their fleet - exactly the model we are now scaling across the NGO and SME sectors.
Shaun Drylie, CEO, Carbn
Looking ahead
FSM continues to evolve its fleet as part of a longer-term stewardship journey. Further electrification will be introduced where it makes operational sense, supported by ongoing data on usage, cost and emissions performance.
More broadly, FSM’s experience highlights an important lesson for the NGO sector:
- Sustainable fleet transition doesn’t require large capital outlay
- Second-life vehicles can unlock immediate commercial and environmental gains
- Data-led, staged change is often more effective than wholesale replacement