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Briefing Outline. BackgroundIntroduction to Truck DrayageEmissionsEmission Reduction StrategiesDrayFLEET ModelDrayFLEET Case Study ResultsCommunication and OutreachExtending SmartWay Partnership Agreements to the Drayage Sector. Background . Drayage trucks are typically Class 8 heavy duty diesel trucks used for short-haul operations Moving containers into and out of marine and rail terminalsSome cross-border truckingIntra-city haulingRegional trucks typically make trips under 200 mi32153
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1. SmartWay Transport Partnership
2. Briefing Outline Background
Introduction to Truck Drayage
Emissions
Emission Reduction Strategies
DrayFLEET Model
DrayFLEET Case Study Results
Communication and Outreach
Extending SmartWay Partnership Agreements to the Drayage Sector
3. Background
Drayage trucks are typically Class 8 heavy duty diesel trucks used for short-haul operations
Moving containers into and out of marine and rail terminals
Some cross-border trucking
Intra-city hauling
Regional trucks typically make trips under 200 miles and dont idle overnight
Drayage and Regional trucks can be a major source of PM 2.5 and NOx emissions
Drayage trucks tend to be older
Driving conditions (stop and go) produce more air pollution
They operate in urban areas and environmental justice issues are a concern
4. Why is Drayage Important? California diesel regulations gaining attention
LA/LB Clean Air Action Plan
Statewide Diesel Truck and Bus Regulations
PM 2.5 National Ambient Air Quality Standard designations will be made in 2009
EPA NCDC grants will increase focus on diesel emissions
Release of SmartWay DrayFLEET model
Facilitates port drayage emission inventories
Allows assessment of emission reduction strategies
Documents substantial drayage emission reductions and costs savings from improved terminal operations
Black Carbon from diesel emissions is newest GHG pollutant
International Council on Clean Transportation forming position on Black Carbon this Fall
5. Port and Nonattainment Areas
6. PM 2.5 Emissions from Heavy Duty Diesel Trucks(Grams of PM 2.5 per Mile)
7. PM 2.5 Emissions by Drive Cycle/Speed (Grams of PM 2.5 per Mile)
8. Port of Los Angeles 2006 Emissions Inventory
9. Strategies to Reduce Drayage Emissions Technology Solutions for drayage trucks
Diesel Oxidation Catalysts
Crankcase Filters
Bunk Heaters
Diesel Particulate Filters*
Flow Through Filters*
Selective Catalytic Reduction*
Terminal Management Strategies
Chassis Pools
Virtual Container Yards
Improved Gate Operations/reduced queues
Electronic Manifests
On-dock rail
Terminal management strategies can increase truck velocity/turn times which means more $ for truckers
APUs and aerodynamics are not typically cost-effective for drayage trucks because of lower mileage
*Not currently practical/available for most drayage trucks
10. Terminal and Port Operational Strategies
11. Exhaust After-Treatment Devices for Class 8 Trucks
12. SmartWay DrayFLEET Model
13. Introduction Our goal is to:
Provide a model to estimate comprehensive drayage emission inventories
Identify, assess and promote cost-saving strategies for reducing drayage emissions
Integrate truck drayage activities and companies into the SmartWay supply-chain network
Audience/Users
Port Operators and Owners
Terminal Operators and Owners
Regional Truck Associations
State and Regional Air Quality Agencies
Metropolitan Planning Organizations
DrayFLEET model is part of Agency-wide Ports Sustainability Strategy
DrayFLEET can support SIP modeling with additional analysis
14. Study Objectives Adapt SmartWay FLEET model to allow planning-level emissions and drayage activity model (DrayFLEET) that depicts drayage activity in terms of
VMT
Emissions
Cost
The model will reflect the impact of changing management practices, terminal operations, and retrofit strategies
Extended gate hours
Appointment systems
Chassis pools
Near-dock or on-dock rail terminals
Truck retrofit, retirement/rebuild/replacement programs
15. Worked with EPA, DOT and Industry Stakeholders EPA
ASD
NCDC
DOT
FHWA (contributed $50,000)
MARAD
Associations
American Association of Port Authorities
American Trucking Association
National Transportation Industrial League
Intermodal Association of North America
Transportation Research Board
National Association of Clean Air Agencies
Environmental Defense Fund
16. Primary Inputs and Outputs Primary Inputs
# Containers
% Rail intermodal
Miles to
Rail
Shippers
Container depots
Gate queue minutes
Hourly labor costs
Fuel costs Primary Outputs
# of trips
VMT
Hours of idle, creep, transient and cruise
Criteria and CO2 emissions
Gallons of fuel
Total drayage costs
Costs per container
17. DrayFLEET Activity Model Information Flow
21. DrayFLEET Case Study Results Conducted 4 Case Studies to test model and evaluate management strategies
LA/LB, NY/NJ, Norfolk, Houston
Worked very closely with ports to develop case study data inputs and results
Wanted to evaluate effectiveness of existing strategies already implemented at ports
Because we were only looking at on and near terminal emissions, we limited drayage travel distance to 5 miles
22. Emission Reductions from Existing Management Strategies (percent and tons/yr)
23. Drayage Cost Savings from Existing Management Strategies
24. Conclusions Operational improvements can reduce PM and NOx emissions by at least 20% to 29%, while also reducing drayage costs by 22% to 44%
Greater us of chassis pools, improved gate operations, and on-dock rail could substantially increase these reductions and savings
DOCs with crankcase filters are the only practical retrofit for most drayage trucks right now (outside of CA)
These can reduce PM emissions by ~30%
EPA should encourage every major U.S. port to:
run the DrayFLEET model
publish a drayage emissions inventory, and
develop an emission reduction strategy (if they havent already done so)
SmartWay should extend the Partnership Agreement to include drayage carriers and shippers
25. Ongoing or Completed Communication/Outreach & Implementation Extensive pre-publication meetings and briefings for stakeholder associations
Have completed four case studies
LA/LB, Houston, Norfolk, NY/NJ
TRBs National Cooperative Freight Research Plan will use DrayFLEET in a $400,000 marine terminal efficiency project
Port of Baltimore has committed to use DrayFLEET for drayage assessment
Plan to meet with Intermodal Motor Carriers Conference in October at ATA Annual Meeting
26. Extending SmartWay Partnership Agreements to the Drayage SectorDRAFT
27. Extending SmartWay Partnership Agreements to the Drayage Sector Goal is to create SmartWay drayage performance requirements that balance:
Superior environmental performance
Financial limitations
Available emission reduction technologies
Key aspects of drayage criteria
Consistent with SmartWays long-haul criteria
Minimize reporting and record keeping requirements for carriers/3PLs, shippers and SmartWay
Performance-oriented (vs. technology focused)
28. Commitments for SmartWay Drayage Carriers SmartWay would showcase drayage carriers to shippers and logistic companies that reduce emissions
Carriers would have flexibility to chose different pathways to meet the criteria
As an example, one option for a carrier with 100 trucks could be, over a three year period:
Eliminate use of all pre-1993 trucks
Install DOCs on most 1994 to 2002 trucks
Increase use of 2003 and newer trucks
After 3 years, PM emissions would be reduced by 61% and NOx emissions would be decreased by 15%
Participating Carriers and 3PLs would agree to collect and report information on emissions performance
29. Shipper Drayage Commitments No new emissions reporting requirements
SmartWay 2.0 will address emissions tracking
SmartWay shippers would agree to
Include drayage shipments in WalMarts FLEET Performance Model assessment
Goal would be to ship ~50% of drayage containers with SmartWay Carriers
Participating carriers and 3PLs would be listed on SmartWay web site
Coordinate distribution center hours of operation with marine terminals