Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

EPA approves California plan to require electric trucks

Rule says about half the trucks sold in California must be all-electric by 2035, but industry group warns that charging stations aren’t ready for the change.

earthjustice electric-heavy-duty-truck0_dennis-schroeder-nrel-800.jpeg

Federal regulators today granted the state of California permission to set tighter vehicle emissions standards than national standards, clearing the way for the state to require that about half the trucks sold in California must be all-electric by 2035.

Specifically, the standards set by the California Air Resource Board (CARB) stipulate that 55% of delivery vans and small trucks, 75% of buses and larger trucks, and 40% of tractor-trailers and other big rigs sold in the state would have to be all-electric by 2035, according to published reports.


California says the new rule is necessary to enforce better engine emission standards for heavy-duty vehicles, which can cause public health hazards like asthma and lung disease due to diesel pollution.

Today’s approval of that argument by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) could have national implications, according to the environmental law organization Earthjustice. Six other states have already followed California’s lead since the Advanced Clean Trucks (ACT) rule passed an initial state vote in 2020, leading to adoption in New York, New Jersey, Washington, Oregon, Massachusetts, and Vermont. Those regions are home to some of the largest ports in the nation, and together account for about 20% of heavy-duty vehicle sales in the country, the group said.

However, some logistics industry professionals warned that the policy is too ambitious, saying that the infrastructure needed to charge all those electric vehicles (EVs) won’t be broadly installed for five to 10 years. If the law is enforced before that time, it could have the unintended effect of driving thousands of truckers out of the industry and exacerbating a longstanding driver shortage, according to a statement by Priyesh Ranjan, CEO of the AI-powered supply chain automation provider Vorto and integrated logistics platform 5F.

Likewise, transportation industry group the American Trucking Associations (ATA) said the “unrealistic” emissions rule could harm the industry nationwide. “By granting California’s waiver for its so-called ‘advanced clean trucks’ rule, the EPA is handing over the keys as a national regulator,” ATA President and CEO Chris Spear said in a release. “This isn’t the United States of California, and in order to mollify a never satisfied fringe environmental lobby by allowing the state to proceed with these technologically infeasible rules on unworkable and unrealistic timelines, the EPA is sowing the ground for a future supply chain crisis.”

According to the ATA, a better way to reach zero emissions is for industry groups to work closely with the EPA and allow more time for requisite new technologies to develop. Spear said that such collaboration has already produced a 98% reduction in truck emissions over the past 35 years.

But in the face of that debate, some of the largest private industry groups in the logistics sector are already moving ahead with plans to buy electric trucks and build charging stations. For example, the real estate firm Prologis has been installing dozens of electric truck charging installations on its logistics properties, including two California sites operated by logistics provider Performance Team, which will soon be able to simultaneously charge up to 38 of its Volvo VNR Electric Class 8 battery-electric trucks.

And the U.S. Postal Service last month began ordering thousands of battery electric vehicles (BEVs) to replace its aging, gasoline-powered mail trucks. USPS in February awarded contracts for 9,250 Ford E-Transit vans—part of its plan to buy 66,000 BEVs by 2028—and ordered more than 14,000 charging stations to be deployed at Postal Service facilities.


 

 

 

Recent

More Stories

Photo of one woman a lectern and four women seated in high stools on a stage in front of an audience.

Supply Chain Xchange Executive Editor Susan Lacefield moderates a panel discussion with Supply Chain Xchange's Outstanding Women in Supply Chain Award Winners (from left to right) Annette Danek-Akey, Sherry Harriman, Leslie O'Regan, and Ammie McAsey.

Diane Rand

Supply Chain Xchange recognizes four practitioners with "Outstanding Women in Supply Chain Award"

Supply Chain Xchange recognized four women who have made significant contributions to the supply chain management profession today with its second annual Outstanding Women in Supply Chain Award. The award winners include Annette Danek-Akey, Chief Supply Chain Officer at Barnes & Noble; Sherry Harriman, Senior Vice President of Logistics and Supply Chain for Academy Sports + Outdoors; Leslie O’Regan, Director of Product Management for DC Systems & 3PLs at American Eagle Outfitters; and Ammie McAsey, Senior Vice President of Customer Distribution Experience for McKesson’s U.S. Pharmaceutical division.

Throughout their careers, these four supply chain executive have demonstrated strategic thinking, innovative problem solving, and effective leadership as well as a commitment to giving back to the profession.

Keep ReadingShow less

Featured

panel at cscmp edge conference nashville

Smoothing out the wrinkles in the nearshoring trend

The surge of “nearshoring” supply chains from China to Mexico offers obvious benefits in cost, geography, and shipping time, as long as U.S. companies are realistic about smoothing out the challenges of the burgeoning trend, according to a panel today at the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP)’s EDGE Conference in Nashville.

Those challenges span a list including: developing infrastructure, weak security, manual processes, and shifting regulations, speakers said in a session titled “Nearshoring: Transforming Surface Transportation in the U.S.”

Keep ReadingShow less
panel speakers cscmp edge conference nashville

After a cyberattack, quick reaction is critical, Estes says

A quick reaction in the first 24 hours is critical for keeping your business running after a cyberattack, according to Estes Express Lines, the less than truckload (LTL) carrier whose computer systems were struck by hackers in October, 2023.

Immediately after discovering the breach, the company cut off their internet, called in a third-party information technology (IT) support team, and then used their only remaining tools—employees’ personal email and phone contacts—to start reaching out to their shipper clients. The message on Day One: even though the company was reduced to running the business with paper and pencil instead of computers, they were still picking up loads on time with trucks.

Keep ReadingShow less
speakers at CSCMP Edge conference nashville

East and Gulf Coast port strike would send ripples across U.S.

As the final hours tick away before a potential longshoreman’s strike begins at midnight on the U.S. East and Gulf coasts, experts say the ripples of that move could roll across the entire U.S. supply chains for weeks.

While some of the nation’s largest retailers were able to pull their imports forward in recent weeks to soften the blow, “the average supply chain is ill-prepared for this,” Tom Nightingale, the former CEO of AFS Logistics, said in a panel discussion today at the Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals (CSCMP)’s EDGE Conference in Nashville.

Keep ReadingShow less
Business leader Fawn Weaver shares an American story at EDGE

Business leader Fawn Weaver shares an American story at EDGE

The first full day of CSCMP’s EDGE 2024 conference ended with the telling of a great American story.

Author and entrepreneur Fawn Weaver explained how she stumbled across the little-known story of Nathan Green and, in deciding to tell that story, launched the fastest-growing and most award-winning whiskey brand of the past five years—and how she also became the first African American woman to lead a major spirits company.

Keep ReadingShow less