Jobs at stake as California port terminal upgrades to green technology
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[June 08, 2023] By
Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Unions hope a $30 million grant to electrify
tractors in a Long Beach, California, port terminal's final push to
become the world's first zero-emissions facility will serve as a bulwark
against lost jobs in an era of energy transition and increasing
automation.
The money from U.S. President Joe Biden's administration for Long Beach
Container Terminal's purchase of 60 electric yard tractors that haul
shipping containers from stacks to waiting trains comes with strings
attached: the new equipment must be operated by humans.
The drivers of those new tractors will labor alongside more than 100
automated vehicles and 70 driverless container-stacking cranes at
America's most automated port terminal, which aims to be emissions free
by 2030.
The U.S. transportation sector is the nation's largest contributor of
climate changing greenhouse gas emissions, according to the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). As seaports race to swap out
diesel equipment like tractors, trucks and cranes for cleaner electric
models, they're also eyeing new automation technology to help process
more cargo.
More automation means fewer jobs, in the minds of union leaders, and
they have found an ally in the White House.
While the $30 million grant is a fraction of the total cost of the
terminal's $2.5 billion modernization program, unions and their allies
hope that it and others like it will show the value of prioritizing jobs
as U.S. employers adopt green technology.
While the unions that represent U.S. seaport workers declined comment
during West Coast port labor talks, the AFL-CIO's Transportation Trades
Department, whose members include railroad and airline workers, made
clear where the unions are focused.
"We've been dealing with technological change for 100 years in terms of
transportation labor," department President Greg Regan said. "Over the
last few years, we've seen a lot more of a recognition that you have to
think about the workforce aspects of it."
Biden's administration, seen as the most worker-friendly in recent
memory, is also pushing for union representation at the plants that will
assemble batteries for electric vehicles. Unions are worried the next
U.S. presidential election could put a less sympathetic leader in the
White House, Regan said.
The Long Beach terminal's electric tractor money comes from the $684
million 2022 Port Infrastructure Development Program that funds projects
such as improving cargo efficiency and reducing emissions. The catch is
those efforts must not include installation of equipment or
infrastructure that would result in a net job loss or a reduction of job
quality.
BET ON ELECTRIC, AUTOMATION
The potential to increase automation in the port sector is huge, with
just 4% of global container terminal capacity coming from partially
automated facilities, according to a 2021 report from the Organization
for Economic Co-operation and Development's International Transport
Forum (ITF), an intergovernmental policy think tank.
The Long Beach terminal, purchased from Hong Kong-based owners in 2019
by the asset management unit of Australia's Macquarie Group Ltd, bet
on both electric power and automated equipment for its decade-long
redevelopment that combined two aged terminals into one.
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Autonomous electric vehicles carry
shipping containers at the Long Beach Container Terminal (LBCT) in
Long Beach, California, U.S., April 20, 2023. REUTERS/Mike Blake
The new facility now handles three times more volume and has reduced
emissions by 90%, CEO Anthony Otto told Reuters.
It was among the top Southern California port terminals in terms of
volume in 2022 and truckers spent less time collecting cargo or
dropping empties - improving efficiency and reducing diesel vehicle
idle time, Otto said.
Citing ongoing West Coast port labor contract talks, Otto declined
to say how many workers have lost jobs in the terminal yard. With
the new technology, chapstick-sized sensors embedded in pavement
dictate movement of flat-topped vehicles that collect containers
from ships and software guides cranes that stack containers.
Union members still secure containers on vessels, operate the
massive ship and rail cranes, set containers on the trailers of
waiting semi-trucks via joystick, and ferry containers to and from
waiting trains.
The terminal's commitment to the union was that "while there was
some erosion of some typical longshore jobs, there would be creation
of new jobs," Otto said. The terminal's payroll is larger now than
before the redevelopment began about a decade ago, Otto added,
without addressing whether that lift came from additional jobs or
inflation.
Data shows electrification cuts emissions, and automation reduces
labor costs. But a 2021 report from ITF, which describes itself as
politically autonomous, and 2018 research from consultancy McKinsey
& Co found that automated ports are generally not more productive
than their labor-based counterparts. This was because fixed
automated systems cannot expand and contract with cargo fluctuations
like human crews, and because automated operations may not boost
performance enough to justify the heftier equipment costs.
A report underwritten by the International Longshore and Warehouse
Union (ILWU) representing West Coast dock workers found that in 2020
and 2021, the Long Beach terminal had 392 fewer jobs than it would
have had if it were not automated.
A competing report commissioned by the Pacific Maritime Association
employer group found that from 2015, the last year before automated
operations, through 2021 paid hours at the automated Long Beach
terminal and another in Los Angeles grew 31.5%. The authors, who
said that gain was twice that of unautomated terminals, declined to
provide figures for Long Beach alone.
Jaime Hipsher, an ILWU tractor driver at the twin Long Beach and Los
Angeles ports, said in an interview last summer she had seen the
employment impacts from energy use changes and the embrace of
automation.
Her father was an ILWU worker at a coal processing facility serving
the ports - a job that was eliminated.
"Oftentimes, electrification is connected with automation," Hipsher
said. "That isn't necessarily the way electrification needs to go."
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles, editing by Ben Klayman
and Claudia Parsons)
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