The governing boards of the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach unanimously approved the 2017 Clean Air Action Plan (CAAP) Update yesterday, despite concerns voiced by logistics and supply chain specialists that the implementation may be unrealistic.
According to port spokesmen, the document “provides high-level guidance for accelerating progress toward a zero-emission future” while protecting and strengthening the ports’ competitive position.
The action sets in motion the process for developing and refining specific programs. The strategies include:
As the detailed implementation programs are developed, they will be brought to each port’s harbor commission for approval.
John McLaurin, president of the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association, thanked the Port Commission for listening to shipper’s concerns.
“Progress was made in some key areas, specifically if the ports were to mandate a technology that has not yet been developed, tested, or made commercially available,” he said.
As noted in LM, the shipping community is concerned about the CAAP’s $14 billion cost and its potential negative impacts on port competitiveness and the one in nine jobs in the Southern California region that are reliant on the ports.
“As the CAAP is implemented, it will take open, honest and collaborative dialogue by all parties to address the feasibility of zero-emission cargo-handling equipment and to examine the ports ability to compete with other North American trade gateways,” said McLaurin.