Green Truck Initiative
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| TTSI
President Victor La Rosa, alongside mayors Antonio
Villaraigosa and Bob Foster, speaks about the coming of a "totally
green truck fleet", to be instilled during 2007 and 2008.
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Aug. 6, 2007
Diesel Technology Forum
Cleaner Cargo Trucks Coming to Port of Los Angeles
LOS
ANGELES, California -- The mayors of Los Angeles and
Long Beach joined shipping industry executives Friday to
jump-start a 12 month program that will replace dirty
diesel freight trucks with a “green port fleet." The new
fleet will initially include 20 new Kenworth trucks
powered by liquid natural gas, LNG. Sponsors of the
event, staged at the Yusen container terminal at the
Port of Los Angeles, were Target Stores, NYK Steamship
Lines, and Total Transportation Services, TTSI. TTSI
President Vic La Rosa announced his company’s commitment
to create a “totally green truck fleet” over the next
year to support major shippers, including Target, the
second largest goods importer to the United States. La
Rosa explained that funding grants from the San Pedro
Bay Ports and the South Coast Air Quality Management
District will help offset the cost of the new trucks.
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said,
“Forty-three percent of all cargo entering the United
States comes through the international gateway of the
San Pedro Bay Ports - cargo valued at hundreds of
billions of dollars. Los Angeles reaps the economic
benefit of this, but emissions from dirty diesel drayage
trucks are a major source of hazardous pollution which
must be addressed.” He commended private industry
representatives on hand at the event for their
commitment to help clean the air by removing dirty
diesel trucks from their fleets. Long Beach Mayor Bob
Foster recapped key provisions of the San Pedro Bay
Ports’ landmark Clean Air Action Plan, with its goal of
deploying 5,300 clean-burning LNG-powered drayage trucks
over time. “This will go a long way to help us reduce
the negative health effects of diesel pollution in our
community," he said. Mayor Foster thanked the publicly
traded natural gas provider Clean Energy for building
the fueling stations and the infrastructure to fuel the
new LNG trucks. Clean Energy has committed to build and
supply three new natural gas fueling stations that will
be conveniently accessible to Port cargo container
trucks powered by LNG. Clean Energy says 14,000 natural
gas vehicles are now fueling at its locations across the
United States, including refuse, transit, shuttle, taxi,
trucking, airport and municipal fleets.