The Port of Long Beach announced Tuesday that it has received preliminary approval for a $50 million grant from the California Air Resources Board for a demonstration of a near-zero and zero-emissions supply chain.
The grant is earmarked for the Sustainable Terminals Accelerating Regional Transformation (START) Project, which will demonstrate nearly 100 pieces of zero-emissions terminal equipment and trucks at three California seaports, develop a near-zero emissions tugboat, deploy two of the cleanest ships to ever to call the West Coast and advance workforce development programs to support sustainable goods movement.
The START Project is part of California Climate Investments, a statewide initiative that puts billions of Cap-and-Trade dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy and improving public health and the environment — particularly in disadvantaged communities, according to a statement from the Port of Long Beach.
Long Beach equipment funded by START includes 33 zero-emissions yard tractors and one top handler at Pier C; five electric trucks at Shippers Transport; two charging outlets at the Clean Trucks Program Center, which will be the first publicly accessible heavy-duty truck charging outlets in Southern California; two Matson container ships with Tier 3 engines, which will be the cleanest container ships to call the West Coast; and Harley Marine electric-drive tugboats.
“The Board of Harbor Commissioners envisions a zero-emissions future in Long Beach,” said board President Tracy Egoscue. “This project accelerates the commercialization for the technology we need to get there, incorporating seaports, terminal operators, equipment manufacturers, schools and universities from all around the state.”
Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero said, “This will help get us to the green future that we all know is necessary if we want to continue to grow our business, and it's the right thing to do for our communities.”
As part of the project, the Port of Long Beach will demonstrate a full near-zero/zero emissions supply chain. In operation, this means a ship — one of the cleanest in the world — would be brought to SSA Marine Pier C by an electric-drive tugboat and then plug into shore power rather than run the vessel’s engines for power needs while docked. Then the cargo containers on the ship would be handled by zero-emissions, battery-electric yard tractors and top handler cargo-handling equipment before being transported on a zero-emissions electric truck to Shippers Transport, an off-dock container yard, the port said.
The port said the project will be completed by June 2021 and includes $52 million in matching funds from private and public partners for a total cost of $102 million.
The grant is earmarked for the Sustainable Terminals Accelerating Regional Transformation (START) Project, which will demonstrate nearly 100 pieces of zero-emissions terminal equipment and trucks at three California seaports, develop a near-zero emissions tugboat, deploy two of the cleanest ships to ever to call the West Coast and advance workforce development programs to support sustainable goods movement.
The START Project is part of California Climate Investments, a statewide initiative that puts billions of Cap-and-Trade dollars to work reducing greenhouse gas emissions, strengthening the economy and improving public health and the environment — particularly in disadvantaged communities, according to a statement from the Port of Long Beach.
Long Beach equipment funded by START includes 33 zero-emissions yard tractors and one top handler at Pier C; five electric trucks at Shippers Transport; two charging outlets at the Clean Trucks Program Center, which will be the first publicly accessible heavy-duty truck charging outlets in Southern California; two Matson container ships with Tier 3 engines, which will be the cleanest container ships to call the West Coast; and Harley Marine electric-drive tugboats.
“The Board of Harbor Commissioners envisions a zero-emissions future in Long Beach,” said board President Tracy Egoscue. “This project accelerates the commercialization for the technology we need to get there, incorporating seaports, terminal operators, equipment manufacturers, schools and universities from all around the state.”
Port of Long Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero said, “This will help get us to the green future that we all know is necessary if we want to continue to grow our business, and it's the right thing to do for our communities.”
As part of the project, the Port of Long Beach will demonstrate a full near-zero/zero emissions supply chain. In operation, this means a ship — one of the cleanest in the world — would be brought to SSA Marine Pier C by an electric-drive tugboat and then plug into shore power rather than run the vessel’s engines for power needs while docked. Then the cargo containers on the ship would be handled by zero-emissions, battery-electric yard tractors and top handler cargo-handling equipment before being transported on a zero-emissions electric truck to Shippers Transport, an off-dock container yard, the port said.
The port said the project will be completed by June 2021 and includes $52 million in matching funds from private and public partners for a total cost of $102 million.