Category: Los Angeles

LAX On Nov 19,2018 the PierPass OffPeak Program Will Change

On Nov 19, the PierPass OffPeak Program Will Change

The current congestion-pricing model, with a Traffic Mitigation Fee (TMF) charged on daytime moves, will be replaced with an appointment-based system that uses a single flat fee on both daytime and nighttime container moves.

Appointments Required for All Import Container Pickups

Beginning Nov. 19, all marine container terminals at the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach will require appointments.

Appointments are to be made through the terminal systems, not through PierPass. Terminal appointment system information is at http://wcmtoa.org/appointment-systems/.

Flat TMF Across All Hours

The TMF previously charged only on Peak (weekday daytime) cargo moves will be replaced by a reduced fee that is constant across all hours and days of operation.

TMF Reduced

Beginning Nov 19, the TMF will be $31.52 per TEU (twenty-foot container).

The TMF for all other size containers will be $63.04.

No Change in Type of Containers Subject to TMF

There is no change in the types of cargo will pay the TMF. The following moves will remain exempt from the TMF:

  • Empty containers
  • Rail intermodal containers
  • Transshipped containers (cargo that arrives at the Port of Los Angeles or Long Beach on one vessel and leaves on a second vessel without entering U.S. commerce)
  • Domestic cargo
  • Bare chassis

At all terminals, the last appointment times of the day will be 3:30 p.m. on the first shift and 1:30 a.m. on the second shift.

How to Register with PierPass

Cargo owners moving containers into and out of the ports by truck gate and who aren’t already registered with PierPass can do so at https://www.pierpass-tmf.org/.

For More Information

A Q&A about the revised OffPeak program is available at www.pierpass.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/QA-on-New-OffPeak-Program_4-16-18.pdf.

Contact information for individual terminals is available at http://wcmtoa.org/terminals/contacts/.

LAX Genset Repo Change

Los Angeles is only going to have genset repos available on dayside on Wednesday going forward.  Please continue to make an appointment as before, but they will only be available Wednesday dayside.

 

Best regards,

TraPac LLC

Port of L.A. to Deploy Fuel Cell Yard Trucks in State-Funded Project

Port of L.A. to Deploy Fuel Cell Yard Trucks in State-Funded Project

Source: NGT News | October 22, 2018

Ballard Power Systems will provide fuel cell modules to power two port terminal yard trucks as part of a project being managed by GTI and partially funded by the California Air Resources Board (CARB).

CARB has preliminarily awarded $5.7 million to GTI for the Zero Emissions for California Ports (ZECAP) Project. The project aims to validate the commercial viability of zero-emission, fuel cell electric hybrid yard trucks operating in a demanding, real-world, cargo-handling application. The ZECAP Project is part of California Climate Investments, a statewide initiative that puts cap-and-trade dollars to work in reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, strengthening the economy, and improving public health and the environment, particularly in disadvantaged communities.

The project will develop, validate and deploy two Capacity TJ9000 fuel cell electric hybrid yard trucks at the Port of Los Angeles. The yard trucks will be operated by TraPac; Ballard will provide 85 kW FCveloCity-HD fuel cell modules for primary propulsion of each yard truck; and BAE Systems will provide the electric drive system and be responsible for systems integration by using its HDS200 HybriDrive propulsion system.

The yard trucks will move cargo containers within the terminal yard. Ballard plans to deliver power modules in 2019, and a 12-month operating period is planned for the project beginning in March 2020.

“Heavy-duty vehicles have a disproportionate impact in terms of air pollution, with buses and trucks accounting for less than 10 percent of vehicles on the road but about one-quarter of all carbon-dioxide emissions, plus a significant amount of pollutants in California,” says Rob Campbell, Ballard’s chief commercial officer. “This heavy-duty vehicle project with GTI and BAE Systems is an important step forward in addressing this issue, particularly at shipping ports where a significant amount of pollution currently occurs. Hydrogen and fuel cells deliver an attractive value proposition, including zero emissions, extended vehicle range, long duty cycles, rapid refueling and zero compromise on payload.”

“GTI is excited to be a part of this project team, including Ballard, that brings leadership and experience in their respective fields to propel the transition to a post-petroleum, heavy-duty trucking economy,” adds Ted Barnes, GTI’s research and development director. “We are very excited to showcase this breakthrough technology and its ability to provide a zero-emission solution for heavy-duty truck operators and the citizens of California.”

View original article here: https://ngtnews.com/port-of-l-a-to-deploy-fuel-cell-yard-trucks-in-state-funded-project

LAX -Reminder Regarding Appointment Requirements for Dual Transactions Empty In / Load Out

In order to accommodate the “No Appointment requirement” for Empty-in moves,

Drivers need to secure appointment for Load out ,  declare as Dual transaction at Pre-gate EMPTY-IN and LOAD-OUT

If an appointment had been made for Empty In please cancel the appointment to free up for someone else to secure

Appreciate your cooperation

LAX Automated Ports Help Carriers Get in and Out of Facilities Faster

Automated Ports Help Carriers Get in and Out of Facilities Faster

Source: Transport Topics | June 29, 2018

The development of self-driving trucks and how they might one day revolutionize the shipment of goods inland has been widely reported. However, while lower on the radar screen, automated container ports are increasingly available for use and already have begun to benefit motor carriers in several ways, industry experts said.

Automated cranes and other systems located at ports in Los Angeles and Long Beach, Calif.; Bayonne, N.J., and Portsmouth, Va., have started to allow motor carriers to load and unload containers at terminals in much faster times than before. More efficiently and densely stacked containers at ports also help to reduce the amount of land space required by port infrastructures to operate.

Eventually, autonomous trucks and self-piloting ships might one day begin entering and leaving these autonomous ports.

But the most immediate benefit provided by these automated ports is reducing the amount of time it takes a carrier to enter a terminal and deliver or pick up a container load.

These turn times — at terminals with or without automated cranes and equipment — vary from terminal to terminal, and also depend, of course, on the amount of container traffic that peaks at different times.

On the West Coast, Robert Loya, director of operations at CMI Transportation, said turn times for his firm’s trucks vary from 30 to 50 minutes at the automated Long Beach Container Terminal, while turn times vary from 50 to 70 minutes at the TraPac terminal in Los Angeles. The discrepancy in time is due to how the Long Beach terminal is a greenfield-built terminal while TraPac’s automated infrastructure was rebuilt on an existing facility that has replaced man-operated cranes, he said.

Comparatively, turn times at non-automated terminals at Los Angeles and Long Beach ports typically take more than an hour, which can easily increase to an hour and a half or longer if there is congestion, Loya said.

“It varies from terminal to terminal, but our guys are in and out of there usually in less than an hour, and that is golden,” Loya said. “From our perspective, the automated terminals have worked a lot better and are more efficient than the traditional deployments. We definitely have no issues with it.”

On the East Coast, meanwhile, at the GCT Bayonne terminal in Bayonne, near the New York and New Jersey harbor entrance, the average delivery time at the 167 acres where semi-automated cranes are in operation is typically less than 45 minutes or just less than an hour to both drop off and pick up loads, according to terminal data. This typically compares to load and drop-off times of about two hours at some other terminals in the New York and New Jersey bay area.

“This data all speaks to how many moves a trucker can make in a day, because if your turn time is around two hours or more, a truck will only make two to three turns a day,” said Bethann Rooney, assistant director of strategy and innovation for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. “But if your turn time is 45 minutes, all of a sudden you are making four or five moves.”

Overall, motor carriers have little to do to prepare to send their trucks to automated terminals, besides having to often place an RFID tag on their vehicles for automated tracking purposes upon arrival. Drivers typically take a short introductory course to learn how and where to stand in a safety zone as their trucks are loaded and unloaded.

As for the logistics of all this automation, when a ship arrives at an automated port, massive cranes unload the multicolored containers from the ship and onto the dock. Robotically controlled straddle carriers typically lift the containers from the dock and move them on a rail system to a stacking yard. Stacking or side-feed cranes then lift the containers in stacks in the yard and are also used to load the containers on or off trucks or trains in this zone. Automated cranes thus represent the bare-bones infrastructure of an automated port. The leading suppliers include Kalmar, Konecranes and Liebherr.

More automation at a container terminal also can allow for longer operating hours, said Timo Alho, vice president of terminal development at Kalmar.

“Automation can help to keep cost of operations down, since it is likely that the terminal operators can extend their operating hours at night and on weekends, and in that way, they can offer better service to the trucking companies,” Alho said.

In the big-picture sense, autonomous port equipment, such as autonomous cars and trucks, are, in theory, more reliable, predictable and efficient than humans are, said Jussi Sarpio, general manager for ASC and RMG Cranes at Konecranes.

“Once the human factor is taken out of the equation, you see a huge jump in productivity,” Sarpio said.

However, before automated loading equipment adoption ever becomes widespread, port operators and suppliers must ready the equipment and infrastructure first, which requires massive capital expenditures. According to port operators and analysts, the construction of an automated port typically costs well over $1 billion.

“I believe the total capital investment for an automated terminal can be in the $2 billion range,” said Peter Schneider, executive vice president at T.G.S. Transportation, based in Fresno, Calif. “Some terminals just don’t see the cost benefit, while the terminals that have invested in them will not disclose how much cost they save. Automation is definitely the No. 1 choice for us, but being realistic, most of the terminals probably won’t go to full automation unless it becomes cheaper.”

According to data compiled by Kalmar, automated gantry cranes, which are located in the stacking zones of a container terminal, are the most widely used type of equipment enabling the automation of container stacking in container yards and on trucks. These cranes fall under two different categories: end-feed automatic stacking cranes (ASC) or side-feed ASCs. Currently, about 30 to 40 container terminals use ASCs globally, Kalmar said.

Autonomous trucks and boats also will likely be deployed to deliver and load containers at automated ports, although observers do not expect that driverless vehicles and pilotless container boats will begin arriving at ports any time in the near future.

“There are many bugs that exist for this last mile of autonomous trucks,” T.G.S. Transportation’s Schneider said, adding that his company has ordered an all-electric Tesla Semi that will include Tesla’s Autopilot automated driving capabilities. There are thousands of different docks out there that have all of the many variables that will pose challenges for self-driving trucks, but “that human drivers can do in their sleep, so to speak,” he said.

However, the first autonomous container ships could begin to arrive at automated and non-automated terminals as early as next year, said Peter Due, director of autonomy at Kongsberg Maritime, which is designing and building an all-electric ship for Yara International ASA that is slated to begin shipments at ports in Norway in 2019.

Meanwhile, the end result of self-piloting ships and port automation means fewer human workers will be required, which will become more of a consideration in the future as more automated ports are built.

“Society is trying to figure out what to do with this displaced workforce,” said Weston LaBar, CEO of the Harbor Trucking Association. “I’m a fundamental believer that automation can help to create jobs but just different types of jobs. The concern is what to do with the percentage of the population that can’t be upskilled.”

Other examples of autonomous boat projects include Wärtsilä’s debut of a working prototype of a remote-controlled container ship last year that self-piloted in the North Sea of Scotland. Rolls-Royce and Google are also working together to develop an autonomous ship. Neither company, however, has communicated a time when these vessels are expected to see commercial deployment.

Kongsberg’s autonomous ship, besides helping to reduce emissions thanks to its electric-powered motor, also will help to make shipping safer because it will require fewer humans on board as the ship pilots itself, Due said.

“Automation on ships and at ports will help to save lives since fewer humans will have to work in these potentially dangerous work conditions,” Due said. “These concepts are readily accepted by society.”

View original article here: https://www.ttnews.com/articles/automated-ports-help-carriers-get-and-out-facilities-faster

LAX Appointment and Grace Period – As a Reminder

Please be advised that TraPac security staff that checks outside driver’s TWIC and driver’s credentials are now asking for truckers appointment times. We have witnessed a large amount of truckers entering the terminal long before their appointment slot and park their vehicle off to the side.

We have noticed that the drivers will either pull off before reaching the In-gate or park at the trouble window, taking up valuable parking spots for drivers that actually have trouble transactions. This is greatly affect our overall turn time with the Harbor Transportation Association and is creating unnecessary congestion in the terminal.

TraPac’s new policy for drivers that arrive earlier than their 30 minute grace window on scheduled appointment will be asked to turn around and wait south of North Access road. Drivers that have trouble transactions will also be asked to exit the terminal and wait south of North Access road until the trouble has been resolved. With TraPac management and the security team enforcing this new policy we should see less congestion in the terminal and quicker turn times for all drivers. Please inform all drivers of these new policies put in place to avoid any delays at the terminal.  

 

LAX Implementing Appointment Requirement for Export Drop Off (Load-in) Move

Los Angeles will be implementing appointment requirement for Export drop off (Load-in move) starting June 13th  (Wednesday), 2018.

Same as imports pick up, and empty drop off, appointments can be made on the eModal website.

Please make the appointments prior to arrival at our facility.

LAX Starting the Week of 3/27, 2018 Zero Tolerance for NOT Following Directions

Starting the week of 3/27, Drivers will be be banned for a week for not following directions.

INFRACTIONS THAT ARE NOT TOLERATED AND WILL RESULT IN “TRUCKER BAN STATUS” IN OUR SYSTEM ARE:

  1. BREAKING THE LIGHT CURTAIN.

Make sure these steps are followed to prevent this issue:

·         DO NOT CROSS THE YELLOW SAFETY LINE SEPERATING THE KIOSK AND THE TRUCK UNTIL THE GREEN INDICATOR LIGHT COMES ON.

·         DRIVER NEEDS TO DOUBLE CHECK THEIR TICKET FOR CORRECT INFORMATION BEFORE BACKING UP INTO LANE. (CORRECT CHASSIS SIZE).

·         DRIVER NEEDS TO MAKE SURE TO UNLOCK TWISTLOCKS BEFORE ENTERING THE KIOSK.

 

2. DRIVING AROUND THE YARD WITH LANDING GEAR DOWN (LANDING GEAR IS TO BE PUT DOWN AT THE CHASSIS PITS ONLY).

 

3. BRINGING IN DAMAGED EQUIPMENT AND NOT NOTIFYING MANAGEMENT AT THE TROUBLE BOOTH.

 

4. DROPPING EMPTY RETURNS ON WHEELS WHEN THE EIR TICKET STATES DIFFERENTELY (THERE ARE INSTANCES WHEN WE WILL DIVERT EMPTIES TO WHEELS, IN THESE CASES WE WILL SIGN THEIR EIR.)

Thank you for your cooperation

LAX – Drivers’ Safety Issue in the Automation Area – Drivers are Breaking the Light Curtains by Forgetting to Unlock Their Twist Locks.

1.  Please verify the container number and chassis size on your EIR (ticket) before entering the automation area.

2.  Please do not use cell phones or other obstructive devices while backing in, the lanes are very tight and your attention is needed.

3.  Please back up all the way to the bumper block.

4.  Please check your pins before walking out of the lane.

5.  Please wait for the GREEN light before going back to your truck after delivery.  DO NOT enter with a RED light, this will shut off the machine and cause other drivers longer delays.

LAX – For Empty-In Appt. Made on the Same Day – Allow Ample Time for Transmissions to Go Back and Forth

Please allow ample time after appointment has been made for the transmission to go back and forth between eModal and TraPac , especially when making same day appointments

In anticipation of this, we are now posting the empty return information for 3 shifts – today’s day shift, tonight’s night shift, and then early afternoon we will post tomorrow’s day shift.  Please watch dates carefully on the empty return section of the website.  This should make it easier for you to know what type/size/line of containers we will be accepting so you can make those appointments starting Feb 16th.

 

these are the requirement to make the empty-in appointment on eModal system

  1. Select for “drop empty”
  2. Type container number (eModal does not have the fleet file, and accept any container number) – please make sure the truckers are using prefix and 7 digit numbers
  3. appointment date/time

We understand the trucking community is accustomed to the eModal empty-in appointment system

should you require any additional info, please feel free to contact us, at 877-3TraPac, or customerservice@trapac.com.