With the opening of Long Beach Container Terminal, 11 percent of the port’s fleet of cargo-handling equipment is zero-emissions.
The annual emissions inventory is reviewed by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, California Air Resources Board and the South Coast Air Quality Management District. Learn more about the port’s emissions inventories here.
Port of Seattle and Local Nonprofit Selected for EPA Environmental Justice Pilot Project
The Port of Seattle and Just Health Action have been selected to receive a grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) focused on improving the health of communities near a port.
In June, Port and EPA leadership attended a "listening" session and walking tour of the Duwamish Valley to learn about environmental challenges faced by the community.
The Near-Port Community Capacity Building/Stakeholder Engagement Project will focus on improving environmental health outcomes for Seattle’s South Park and Georgetown communities. Port-Community collaborative activities will focus on building engagement, advocacy and collaboration skills in communities and improving partnerships with the port to address community needs.
The pilot will test and refine the EPA Ports Initiative’s new capacity building and stakeholder engagement toolkits: the Ports Primer for Communities, the Community Action Roadmap, and the Environmental Justice Primer for Ports. The EPA has committed one year of a technical assistance grant to facilitate the pilot project between the Port of Seattle and environmental justice communities in the Duwamish Valley.
Through the pilot, the port and its non-profit partner will work together over the next year to:
"We are thrilled to be selected for this environment justice project – working with neighboring communities to address environmental impacts along the Duwamish River is very important to the port and a positive step towards environmental and social equity." said Port of Seattle Commissioner John Creighton.