Environment: Long Beach/Los Angeles

San Pedro Bay Ports Release Draft of 2017 Clean Air Action Plan Update

The ports of Long Beach and Los Angeles on July 19 released the draft of their proposed 2017 Clean Air Action Plan (CAAP) Update. The document outlines a new set of near-term and long-term strategies aimed at reducing air pollution from all port-related sources, assisting the state in meeting greenhouse gas reduction goals, and ultimately achieving zero emissions for trucks and terminal equipment.


The document’s release kicks off a public review and comment period that extends through September 18.

The draft incorporates feedback from nearly two years of dialogue with industry, environmental groups, regulatory agencies and neighboring communities. The ports conducted multiple small-group meetings and a public workshop prior to releasing a discussion document last November detailing their goals, priorities and strategies for public review and comment.

Grouped under four categories, the 2017 CAAP’s near-term and long-term strategies include:

Clean Vehicles, Equipment Technology and Fuels

Freight Infrastructure Investment and Planning

Freight Efficiency

Energy Resource Planning

The updated CAAP captures projects underway as well as future projects, including those that will require further study to determine how and when to demonstrate new technology. A roadmap for conducting feasibility assessments is among the supporting documents.

Supporting documents also include a preliminary analysis estimating the cost of implementing the 2017 CAAP at $7 billion to $14 billion. Given the magnitude of the investment, the draft plan calls for the ports to intensify their funding advocacy and increase collaboration with their partners to finance the new strategies.

The 2017 CAAP sets new clean air goals focused on reducing greenhouse gas emissions 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2030 and 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050. The plan carries over previous 2023 targets for cutting other primary pollutants aimed at reducing diesel particulate matter (DPM) 77 percent, sulfur oxides (SOx) 93 percent, and nitrogen oxides (NOx) 59 percent below 2005 levels.

The most recent emissions inventories show the ports have already surpassed the 2023 DPM and SOx reduction targets and are within striking range of the NOx target. The 2017 CAAP identifies the tougher measures needed to ratchet down harmful emissions to zero or near-zero levels.