39903.
As used in this chapter, the following definitions apply:(a) “Cargo handling equipment” means any off-road, self-propelled vehicle or equipment used at a port or intermodal railyard to lift or move container, bulk, or liquid cargo carried by ship, train, or another vehicle, or used to perform maintenance and repair activities that are routinely scheduled or that are due to predictable process upsets.
(1) Cargo handling equipment includes, but is not limited to, rubber-tired gantry cranes, yard trucks, top handlers, side handlers, reach stackers, forklifts, loaders, aerial lifts, excavators, and dozers. Cargo handling equipment does not include any yard truck that is licensed as an on-road vehicle.
(2) For purposes of this chapter, cargo handling equipment does not mean any fully automated cargo handling equipment or infrastructure that is used to support fully automated cargo handling equipment, including equipment that is remotely operated and remotely monitored with or without the exercise of human intervention or control. This section does not limit the use of devices that support human-operated cargo handling equipment, including equipment to evaluate the utilization and environmental benefits of that human-operated equipment.
(b) (1) “Covered equipment” means any hydrogen-powered cargo handling equipment or off-road hybridized rubber-tired gantry cranes that significantly reduce criteria pollutants, toxic air contaminants, and greenhouse gas emissions.
(2) “Covered equipment” includes any of the following:
(A) New equipment sold for operation at a seaport or intermodal yard.
(B) Retrofit or replacement of old engines powering equipment with new or retrofitted engines, motors, or drives for operation at a seaport or intermodal yard.
(C) Development and demonstration of advanced technologies for equipment for operation at a seaport or intermodal yard.
(c) “Regulatory baseline” means the state board’s 2022 Cargo Handling Equipment Emission Inventory, and any subsequent updates to the inventory.
(d) “Repower” means to replace an existing engine with a newer engine or power source.