Category: Los Angeles

Demurrage & LFD Display

Drayage Community,

Due to recent changes as a result of the Ocean Shipping Reform Act (OSRA), TraPac will no longer display the Last Free Day (LFD) or Demurrage due on the TraPac.com corporate website. Demurrage payments will also no longer be accessible through TraPac.com for all Ocean Carriers. While most of this functionality remains on eModal.com, depending on the Ocean Carrier, please contact your Ocean Carrier on best practices for capturing LFD and paying demurrage.

Please note that the Ocean Carrier retains the final responsibility for determining the amount of demurrage to be collected as they have the ability to extend the number of free days, waive demurrage days, or direct that cargo be released without collecting funds as they see fit.  If the extension of free time does not reflect on eModal or the Ocean Carrier website, depending on the Ocean Carrier, please contact the Ocean Carrier directly.

Thanks, TraPac Management

LAX – CTF (Clean Truck Fund) – Starting April 1, 2022

Effective April 1, 2022

All containers going through the container terminal gates at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach  MUST PAY the Ports’ Clean Truck Fund (CTF) Rate.

You must be registered with PortCheck to pay the (CTF) Rate.

Since you already registered with PierPASS, you can simply login to https://www.pierpass-tmf.org, select PortCheck, and then by approving the PortCheck Terms & Conditions, you will be registered in PortCheck.

Your PierPASS Login ID and Password are the same for PortCheck and PierPASS.

Containers will need to be claimed separately under PierPASS and PortCheck.

Claiming/Paying for PortCheck CTF Rates via the website will be available beginning on March 29th.

If you are a Credit customer with PierPASS and wish to have credit privileges for PortCheck, you will need to apply from within your PortCheck account.  The ability to request credit under PortCheck will be made available prior to March 29th.

Questions about the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach Clean Air Action Plan (CAAP) Clean Truck Program (CTP) and its Clean Truck Fund (CTF) Rate, please see https://polb.com/environment/clean-trucks/#clean-truck-fund-rate-faqs

 

TraPac Safety Reminder

Please follow below rules and precautions that will help keep everyone at the terminal safe:

  • Unlock/lock twistlocks in designated areas only
  • Observe posted speed limits and stop signs- Terminal equipment has the right of way at stop signs
  • No cell phone use while driving
  • Wear a seat belt while operating and inside the vehicle
  • No parking outside of designated parking areas
  • No idling
  • All drivers must have in their possession a valid driver’s license, TWIC, current vehicle registration, and proof of insurance ready for examination upon demand by security and/or law enforcement
  • All vehicles and equipment are subject to inspection
  • Drive with landing gear up
  • Always have EIR ticket with you
  • No unauthorized passengers or pets are allowed
  • Report all incidents (damage, spills, injuries)
  • Do not walk or drive under a suspended load
  • Wear a high-visibility outwear (vest), safety shoes, and hard hate while on the terminal and outside of your vehicle

Emergency Number: (310) 513-7490

Failure to follow the above-posted rules at any TraPac terminal could result in a temporary suspension from the terminal.

Thanks, TraPac Management

LAX – Empty Container Policy

Please note that we have recently seen several empty containers returned to the terminal with contents still inside.

Effective immediately, truck operators will be required to ensure that the contents of their empty containers are free off any debris, dunnage, false compartments, cargo and/or persons prior to arriving to terminal.

Any violation of the above will result in an indefinite ban on the driver and possible repercussions for the trucking company.   We appreciate your prompt attention to this matter.

 

THE Alliance adds terminal changes at port of Los Angeles amid cargo surge

Source: S&P Global Platts | September 30, 2020

At least two ships arriving at the Port of Los Angeles have been diverted to alternative terminals in response to infrastructure overload and equipment issues owing to the recent surge in trans-Pacific cargo volumes.

The Hyundai Bangkok and the Hyundai Splendor, set to arrive on the US West Coast in early October, will now berth at the Trapac and YTI terminals, respectively.

This was the most recent move made to reduce volume strains and “ease the current hectic terminal situation” at the Port of Los Angeles, said member of THE Alliance, ONE, in a notice to customers on Sept. 29.

The Port of Los Angeles posted a record high container volume in August as strong US demand for consumer goods sharply increased shipping rates.

The port has ongoing operational issues as a result of increased import demand on the trans-Pacific lane and equipment shortages throughout the Pacific Southwest.

Total throughput at the port in August was 961,833 twenty-foot equivalent units, up 12% from the same month last year, the port announced on Sept. 15.

THE Alliance, the smallest of the three container shipping alliances, has a combined capacity of 3.67 million TEUs. ONE is a member along with Hapag-Lloyd, HMM, and Yang Ming Marine.

View original article here: https://www.spglobal.com/platts/en/market-insights/latest-news/shipping/092920-the-alliance-adds-terminal-changes-at-port-of-los-angeles-amid-cargo-surge

Automated container terminal streamlines U.S. supply chain

Source: Control Engineering | September 25, 2020

The TraPac San Pedro Bay facility in Los Angeles is the first automated container terminal in North America, bringing more goods through the same footprint, with faster truck turn times and a 90% reduction in emissions.

Containers at TraPac’s Los Angeles terminal now move in a highly choreographed dance between ships, trains and trucks, using hybrid automated straddle carriers (auto-strads). Courtesy: PI North America

Container terminals are vital links in the U.S. supply chain between manufacturers and consumers. The TraPac San Pedro Bay facility in Los Angeles shows how automation enabled terminal operators to move goods more quickly and efficiently, while doing more to protect the environment and workers.

The facility is the first automated container terminal in North America (see Figure 1). Automation bringing more goods through the same footprint than a manual facility, with faster truck turn times and a 90% reduction in emissions. The company also operates container terminals in Oakland, Calif., and Jacksonville, Fla.

The Los Angeles and Oakland terminals have a cargo capacity of 1.6MM TEUs and 650,000 TEUs, respectively, with volumes increasing. TEU stands for twenty-foot equivalent unit, a measure of containerized cargo. Agricultural exports from the Midwest and imported goods from Pacific Rim countries transit through the terminal.

An investment toward automation
“We’ve invested in the future, using automation technologies to move cargo through the terminal quickly and safely, heighten security for personnel and cargo, minimize customer risk and delays, and reduce emissions,” said Mark Jensen, vice president for asset management at TraPac.

Containers at TraPac’s Los Angeles terminal now move in a highly choreographed dance between ships, trains and trucks, using hybrid automated straddle carriers (auto-strads) and electrical grid-powered automated stacking cranes (see Figure 2). The terminal was the first in California to implement many automated systems, including truck handling, on-dock (intermodal) rail and customs scanning.

By confining most container handling functions behind a secure fence, the operation is also safer, with many features designed to keep humans and machines separate, such as kiosks to protect truck drivers as automated equipment moves to load or unload their trucks. If a driver steps off the pressure sensor pad in the booth, automated equipment is immediately halted. These and other safety features were implemented through secure collaboration to aid large-scale remote operations.

Linking efficiency, safety with Profinet
A Profinet Ethernet network links the automated stacking cranes at the terminal and allows facility-wide programmable logic controller (PLC) monitoring of devices to maintain uptime and safety, while ProfiSafe is integrated into the access control for the automation system (see Figure 3). (ProfiSafe is an additional software layer that provides functional safety over the bus on top of existing Profibus and Profinet protocols.) The conveyor that moves containers through customs scanning also uses Profinet.

“The risk controls call for a deterministic automation network to provide for predictable heartbeat-type PLC monitoring from field devices that, in turn, allows other elements of the system to respond in a known time to both expected and emergency commands,” Jensen said. “For example, in the event of an access point being forcefully breached, the automation control system is able respond in sub-seconds, bringing our massive cranes and [automated straddle carriers] to a stop.”

The multi-protocol multi-vendor approach
Profinet and Profibus communications are deployed in two main ways at the terminal. “Profibus is the dominant protocol between the PLC and motion drives in the automated cranes,” Jensen said, “while Profinet is used extensively over the crane itself with both copper and fiber physical layers. Profinet also connects the automated stacking cranes, access control and the centralized controller PLCs. This across-facility communication to bring cranes and access control together also relies on a combination of copper and fiber physical layers.

“In the case of the across-facility communication application between PLC equipment nodes, this includes a lot of heartbeat-style monitoring by the PLCs to ensure a continuously connected fail-safe system, as well as grander automated interactions between the paired cranes on common rail runways within a crane block.”

The automated stacking cranes were the first to use a Profinet network at the facility. Modbus is used in a number of other applications, and intra-equipment systems deploy other fieldbuses, such as CANbus, CANopen and ASi. Wireless communications also link the automated straddle carriers and various portable devices, such as those used by union clerks for exception handling and for reefer monitoring by union mechanics.

“Throughout these communication arrangements, we are interfacing across many brands,” Jensen said. “Additionally, we maintain certain redundancies within our infrastructure to effectively manage scenarios that may create delays.”

On-dock rail uses Profinet for remote desk connection for exception handling. “Our intermodal yard cranes also interface with the infrastructure and systems through an orchestrated automated arrangement,” Jensen said. “As a company, we are continuing to improve and surpass challenges through equipment abilities and operational scenarios.”

Kalmar, a Finnish maker of material handling equipment for container and industrial applications, designed and manufactured the terminal’s automated systems.

A multi-stage transition
The TraPac terminal’s transformation from diesel-powered material handling equipment to automated grid-electric with hybrid machines was accomplished through a multi-stage project, allowing the terminal to keep operating on schedule throughout the transition.

The first phase, which began in 2012, saw the installation of the first auto-strads and the first four automated stacking crane blocks. This was followed between 2014 and 2018 by 11 more crane blocks and an increase in the auto-strad fleet.

The automated stacking cranes, which can stack containers up to five high and lift loads up to 41 tons, have enabled TraPac to stack containers more densely, freeing up space for the intermodal rail system, which also was brought online during this period. It’s the only fully automated, emissions-free on-dock U.S. rail yard.

The terminal now deploys 29 giant, rail-mounted gantry stacking cranes powered by grid electricity to move containers, replacing rubber-tired, diesel-powered cranes. Truck handling is a sub-feature of the automated stacking cranes.

“Although it does not exclusively rely on Profinet, the interface has been improved,” Jensen said. “With continued reliability, interfacing communication and behaviors have allowed better handling of containers for landside delivery. This is achieved by maintaining a driver on a pressure sensor in their respective kiosk box, allowing the crane to operate and safely handle the evolution at the landside transfer point.”

A cleaner ecosystem, faster motion control
“By being able to pack containers more densely, we’ve been able to better match yard capacity to berth capacity as well as reallocate space for intermodal operations,” Jensen said. “Before, we had to truck every container through local streets to the terminal. Now, with 30 percent of the collection and distribution moves completed by rail, street congestion and emissions have been reduced and containers are moved more quickly to rail hubs closer to the beneficial cargo owners.”

There has also been a huge reduction in emissions from over-the-road truckers in the vicinity of the terminal, according to Jensen. This is important because an average of 1,000 trucks move through the terminal during each shift, with nine shifts every week.

“A key difference in our automated terminal area is that we get the truckers to an automation area where they wait (engine off) while we collect or bring the containers to them as the case might be for either single or dual transactions. This way of working significantly reduces the truckers ‘engine on’ time within our terminal,” he said.

Emission control measures even extend to the ships that call at the port, with 100% of the vessels using alternative maritime power (AMP) or an equivalent technology to reduce pollutants and greenhouse gases. All of these advances have created a near-zero emissions ecosystem at the Los Angeles terminal, in keeping with California’s strict environmental requirements and TraPac’s goals for achieving a more efficient, safer and cleaner operation.

View original article here: https://www.controleng.com/articles/automated-container-terminal-streamlines-u-s-supply-chain/

LAX – CCPP and AIM Chassis

Trucking Community

Please DO NOT have drivers hook up to any CCPP or AIM chassis unless you are picking up APL/CMA cargo from TraPac . If the driver fails to use the correct pool chassis printed on the driver tricket, he will be turned around at the outgate to correct.  If you have any questions Please reach to Yard Operations at 310 513 7464

 

 

 

LAX becomes first California terminal operator to join Green Marine

Los Angeles, CA, July 8, 2020 – TraPac Los Angeles, a container terminal featuring state-of-the-art facilities and technologies at the Port of Los Angeles is Green Marine’s newest participant and the first terminal operator in California to join the voluntary environmental program for North America’s maritime industry.

With terminals in Los Angeles, Oakland and Jacksonville, TraPac LLC is a sustainability pioneer that already shares Green Marine’s focus on continuous improvement. TraPac’s Los Angeles terminal was the first North American container terminal to be fully automated and the first in the world to offer an automated on-dock rail facility. “Our automated cargo handling equipment reduces emissions of particulate matter and NOx by more than 99% and GHG emissions by over 90% per TEU when compared to competing terminals,” noted CEO Stephen Edwards.

“We are determined to continue improving our environmental performance, and participating in a rigorous and transparent environmental initiative such as Green Marine complements the sustainable development approach adopted by TraPac,” adds Edwards.
Green Marine is delighted to welcome a major sustainability leader within the industry. “TraPac’s commitment to the environment is exemplary,” stated David Bolduc, Green Marine’s executive director. “Having this champion of innovation as a participant will no doubt enhance Green Marine’s knowledge pool to continually improve maritime transportation’s overall sustainability.”

TraPac has implemented a number of programs and technologies at its Los Angeles terminal to mitigate vessel emissions, including automated straddle carriers – low-emission hybrid-electric vehicles that move containers between the waterside transfer area, container stacks, the U.S. Customs radiation scanner and the on-dock rail area. Alternative maritime power (AMP) and bonnet capture (a system for ships that are not equipped for shore power) permits every single vessel calling at TraPac to shut down its auxiliary engines while at berth to reduce pollutants, greenhouse gases and noise.

The Green Marine environmental program addresses a number of environmental priority issues through its 13 performance indicators, including greenhouse gases, air emissions, leak and spill prevention, waste management, and underwater noise. Some indicators apply to landside operations and others to shipping activities. The certification process is rigorous and transparent, with the results independently verified every two years and the individual performance of each participant made public annually.

About TraPac (Los Angeles)
Started in 1985, TraPac LLC is transforming the global shipping industry by making strategic investments in technology and services that provide unparalleled premium services to its customers. The innovations that TraPac is pioneering are setting new standards for efficiency, security, safety and environmental protection throughout the industry. TraPac’s Los Angeles terminal became the first facility on the U.S. West Coast to introduce the automation of loading/unloading operations.

About Green Marine 
Founded in 2007, Green Marine’s North American environmental certification program is the result of a voluntary effort by the shipping industry to go beyond regulations. More than 145 ship owners, port authorities, terminal operators, and shipyard managers throughout Canada and the United States are participants. The Green Marine program’s unique character derives from the support it receives from environmental, scientific and government organizations. More than 75 supporters help to shape and revise the program. www.green-marine.org