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California Freight Mobility. Bruce de Terra Chief, Office of System and Freight Planning Division of Transportation Planning California Department of Transportation. To Infinity and Beyond. California – a land of dreamers, visionaries and doers. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Bruce de TerraChief, Office of System and Freight Planning Division of Transportation PlanningCalifornia Department of Transportation
California Freight Mobility
California Freight Mobility - June 2011
To Infinity and Beyond
California – a land of dreamers, visionaries and doers.Space Shuttle Endeavour, our most expensive freight mode, final landing at the California Science Center in L.A. There is a transportation future, help invent that future.
California Freight Mobility - June 2011 3
Bruce’s View The TruthTransportation is a corner-stone of every empire, multi-national business & power region that has ever existed. It is perhaps the only common denominator among them.Caltrans and our planning work are essential to California’s future. Either we do that work, or someone else will.We’ve got to have fun while doing our jobs well.
Presentation Topics
California Freight System Overview
Caltrans Freight Program Activities
Freight System Overview
SeaportsRailroadsTruckingIntermodal FacilitiesAir Freight Impacts
Got TEU?Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit
Ships – 11,000 (Panamax 4,500),Trains 240 & Trucks 1
12 Seaports – an Evolving SystemLos Angeles - #1 in TEUs nationallyLong Beach - #2 in TEUs nationally
Combined, # 5 in world
Oakland - #5 in TEUs nationally-50/50 split9 other CA deepwater ports – mostly bulk, one private – who can name them all?Competition: West Coast ports, Panama Canal expansion, Gulf & East Coast portsLesser ports and harbors – here fishy fishy
God is not making new deep water seaports in California.
It would take an act of God to get a new human made deep water seaport through the NEPA/CEQA process.Ports are fragile economic entities that are generally owned by local jurisdictions under Tidelands Public Trust. They are California’s ultimate PPP enterprise.
Freight Railroads
Roughly 400 mile minimum threshold, very efficient, up to 8,000 foot long trains Class I – privately owned
Union Pacific (UP) Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) Issues: capacity, passenger rail, grade crossings, safety,
community impacts, air quality, technology.
Shortline Railroads – no, not Monopoly
Class I Railroad Spending* on Infrastructure vs. State Highway Agency Spending* - 2006
RR vs SHS 2006 spending
*Capital outlays plus maintenance expenses.
Sources: FHWA Highway Statistics Table SF-12; AAR
1. Texas $7.572. Florida $5.693. California $4.19
Union Pacific $4.17BNSF $3.89
4. New York $3.595. Pennsylvania $3.306. Illinois $3.30
CSX $2.627. Michigan $2.618. North Carolina $2.489. Ohio $2.14
Norfolk Southern $2.1210. Georgia $1.88
$ in Billions
UP California Business Dimensions
Ag Products 17%
Autos 10%
Chemicals 7%
Energy 2%
Industrial Products15%
TEU Intermodal49%
TruckingTruckingShort DistanceLong Distance
TEU vs 53’ truck length - repackingI-710 – demand exceeding capacityRestrictions on where trucks can goSmall operators - LaborIntermodal Facilities – pressure for mode shift to electric train/shuttle
Trucking Issues
More & heavier trucksDeteriorating pavementFuel and emissions regulationsCost of environmental complianceSafetyTraffic Congestion
Intermodal FacilitiesSCIG – near dock: Scottish Curling-Ice Group, Submarine Cable Improvement Group, Southern California International Gateway – BNSF
Hobart – near downtown L.A.: “If it were a hub for ships instead of trains, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.'s Hobart rail yard would rank as the fourth-largest U.S. container port, behind Los Angeles, Long Beach and New York-New Jersey.”
San Pedro Bay Ports Clean Air Action PlanInland Empire – Jobs, Jobs, Jobs & impacts - future shift to High Desert?
Air FreightIn 2003 CA airports handled 22% of all U.S. air shipments with LAX #2 and SFO #4 in nation. LAX #13 in world - currentHigh Value & low weight – $116 billion in value in 2003 handled by CA airports.Much cargo time sensitive.Airports publicly owned – another PPPRelatively easy mode to loose share, but often use same aircraft as passengers.
California Freight Mobility - June 2011 21
Impacts
Toxic air pollution from diesel exhaust (particulate matter, NOx, SOx).Environmental Justice issues – disproportionate impacts to neighboring communities along freight corridors and nodes such as respiratory disease, noise and visual blight.Climate Change - Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions.Stress on an already over burdened transportation system.
Caltrans Freight ProgramGoals & objectivesGoods Movement Action Plan (GMAP)Trade Corridor Improvement Fund – (TCIF) Prop 1BNew initiatives: California Freight Mobility Plan, Rail Plan Update, Freight ModelOverarching Issues: community impacts, air quality, climate change, sea level rise, competition, physical constraint, $$$
Caltrans Freight Program Goals
Improve freight mobility: improved throughput, velocity, reliability, access; reduced congestion.
Improve California’s economy: economic development, jobs retention and creation, reduced transport costs.
Improve California’s environment: reduced air emissions, reduced community impacts, enhanced environmental justice, ballast.
Increase public safety and security: reduced roadway and rail incidents, increased security at ports-of-entry.
Caltrans Freight Program Goals
Goods Movement Action Plan (GMAP)
Groundbreaking approach involving Caltrans, Agency, Air Resources Board, Regions, Industry, others.
2005 Phase I: 180 projects/groups, $47 billion.
2007 Phase II: 24 projects/groups, $10 billion.
Expect to see a National Freight policy – and give a wink to the folks who developed GMAP.
Trade Corridor Improvement Fund (TCIF)
$2 billion from State Proposition 1B bond, $1 billion SHOPP added.
79 projects, with a total cost of $8 billion.
Includes highway capacity, grade separations, rail capacity projects, and port access projects (bridges, interchanges, rail yards).
Federal TIGER Program
Colton Crossing ($33.8 m),
Oakland/Stockton/West Sacramento “Green Trade Corridor” ($30m),
Otay Mesa POE/I-805-SR 905 ($20.2m),
Doyle Drive in SF($46m).
New Initiatives
California Freight Mobility Plan – an update of the GMAP and then some: CSULB & USCRail Plan Update - includes freight rail as well as the traditional passenger and pending HSRStatewide Freight Model - supporting the CIB – UC IrvineSCAG - Comprehensive Regional Goods Movement Plan and Implementation Strategy http://www.scag.ca.gov/goodsmove/regionalplan.htmSan Joaquin Valley - San Joaquin Valley Interregional Goods Movement Plan
Overarching Freight Issues
How can California • maximize economic benefits and • minimize environmental and
community impacts while • remaining competitive • in an intense global freight market?
Solutuions?Vehicle technology improvements
Fuel improvements
System and mode operational improvements
Infrastructure Improvements
Partnerships
All of us working together.