Singapore, Los Angeles, and Long Beach have renewed their green shipping corridor partnership for another three years, reinforcing efforts to accelerate maritime decarbonisation on one of the world’s key trans-Pacific trade routes.
The renewed pact is expected to focus on scaling the use of cleaner marine fuels, supporting low-emission vessel deployment, improving port-side infrastructure, and sharing best practices on sustainability standards and digital efficiency.
The collaboration links three major maritime hubs that play a critical role in global container trade, making the corridor an important testbed for practical emissions-reduction measures in international shipping.
Industry stakeholders say the extension signals growing commitment among ports and policymakers to move from pilot initiatives toward commercially viable green shipping solutions.
The renewed partnership also aligns with broader global targets to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from shipping, while helping cargo owners and carriers meet increasingly stringent environmental expectations.
