Port Of Long Beach Joins The Green Shipping Corridor
The Port of Long Beach has actually joined to the Shanghai-Los Angeles Green Shipping Corridor, a collaboration of C40 Cities, ports, delivering business as well as freight proprietors assembled to develop a zero-emissions trans-Pacific profession course.
First introduced in January by C40 Cities, the ports of Shanghai as well as Los Angeles, as well as essential maritime stakeholders, this Green Shipping Corridor will certainly be a large action towards decarbonizing delivery in between the busiest ports in China as well as theUnited States C40 Cities is a network of the globe’s leading cities that are functioning to provide the immediate activity required to challenge the environment situation as well as develop a future where everybody, all over can prosper.
The collaboration plans to interact to accomplish these objectives by creating a “Green Shipping Corridor Implementation Plan” by the end of 2022 that will certainly consist of deliverables, objectives as well as acting landmarks, as well as functions for individuals.

“This initiative builds on important efforts our Port participates in, including the World Ports Climate Action Program, an international commitment to develop projects to address global warming and meet the goals outlined in the Paris Agreement,” stated Port ofLong Beach Executive Director Mario Cordero “It also complements the Clean Air Action Plan, and supports our shared goals to reduce carbon emissions and advance technologies, especially for vessels, which are our largest source of emissions.”
“Accelerating efforts to decarbonize the shipping sector is urgent if we are to limit global heating to 1.5 degrees Celsius,” C40 Executive Director Mark Watts stated. “By convening a powerful coalition that includes the San Pedro Bay ports complex, the Port of Shanghai and key maritime industry stakeholders, we hope to be an important catalyst in decarbonizing supply chains of all kinds around the world, while also creating a replicable model for other port cities to follow.”
“The Port of Long Beach has an arsenal of environmental initiatives, with an ultimate goal of reaching zero-emission terminal operations by 2030 and truck operations by 2035,” statedLong Beach Harbor Commission President Steven Neal “Joining the Green Shipping Corridor extends our influence outside of our own city, seeks to decarbonize shipping operations, and reinforces our commitment to balancing economic activity with sustainability.”
Key decarbonization objectives for the Green Shipping Corridor collaboration consist of:
- The phasing in of reduced, ultra-low, as well as zero-carbon sustained ships via the 2020s with the globe’s very first zero-carbon trans-Pacific container ships presented by 2030 by certified as well as eager delivery lines.
- The growth of ideal monitoring methods to help in reducing exhausts as well as boost performance for all ships utilizing this worldwide profession hallway.
- Reducing supply chain exhausts from port procedures, as well as enhancing air top quality in the ports of Shanghai, Los Angeles as well as Long Beach, as well as nearby areas.
Reference- Port Of Long Beach











