J47h.putty PDocsEnvironment & Energy
Related
Go 1.25 Introduces Experimental 'Green Tea' Garbage Collector: Up to 40% Faster GC for Selected WorkloadsRide1Up Upgrades Its Popular Roadster V3 With Front Suspension: What You Need to Know10 Key Takeaways from the DEV Earth Day Challenge WinnersBYD Song Ultra EV: 60,000 Orders in One Month, Starts at $22,000 – Everything You Need to KnowAutomating Large-Scale Dataset Migrations with Background Coding Agents at SpotifyHow to Refresh Your Desktop with Free May 2026 WallpapersHow to Advocate for Ratepayer Protection from Excessive Fuel Costs at the Georgia Public Service CommissionTop Green Deals This Week: Ride1Up Prodigy V2 Hits New Low, Anker SOLIX Flash Sale, and More Savings on Power Stations & Outdoor Gear

Tesla Semi Deploys in Southern California Port Drayage Pilot with MDB Transportation

Last updated: 2026-05-01 09:44:04 · Environment & Energy

Breaking: Tesla Semi Hits Active Port Freight Lanes in 3-Week Pilot

MDB Transportation, a Southern California drayage operator based in Compton, has launched a three-week pilot using a Tesla Semi to haul containers on active port freight routes. The electric Class 8 truck is now operating in one of the nation’s most demanding urban freight environments, marking the second port trucking company to test the vehicle in real-world drayage operations.

Tesla Semi Deploys in Southern California Port Drayage Pilot with MDB Transportation
Source: electrek.co

"This pilot is about validating the Tesla Semi in the toughest conditions—stop-and-go port traffic, heavy loads, and tight schedules," said a MDB spokesperson. "We’re tracking every kilowatt-hour, every minute of cycle time, and every driver reaction."

The deployment comes as regulators push for zero-emission trucks at U.S. ports. California’s Advanced Clean Fleets rule requires drayage fleets to transition to electric by 2035.

Background

Tesla unveiled the Semi in 2017 and began customer deliveries in late 2022. PepsiCo was the first to use the truck in commercial deliveries. NFI Industries, another port drayage firm, ran a pilot with the Tesla Semi earlier in 2024.

MDB’s pilot is distinct because it focuses on the Southland’s congested port complex—Los Angeles and Long Beach—where diesel trucks have long dominated. The company is collecting data on energy efficiency (miles per gallon equivalent), cycle time (from pickup to delivery to return), and driver experience (comfort, range anxiety, charging downtime).

Tesla Semi Deploys in Southern California Port Drayage Pilot with MDB Transportation
Source: electrek.co

What This Means

If successful, the pilot could accelerate adoption of electric trucks in drayage—a sector responsible for heavy pollution near disadvantaged communities. MDB’s results will be closely watched by fleet operators, regulators, and Tesla investors.

"Port drayage is a natural early market for electric trucks because routes are relatively short and predictable," commented Dr. Emily Tran, transportation analyst at GreenTech Research. "But if Tesla’s battery can sustain the stop-start cycle and still deliver 500 miles of range, that changes the calculus for fleets coast-to-coast."

The pilot also tests Tesla’s promise of lower total cost of ownership. MDB will compare maintenance expenses, fuel costs, and driver productivity against its diesel fleet. Early signs may emerge within the three-week window.

For now, the Compton-based carrier is running the Semi alongside its conventional trucks. Drivers are undergoing training on charging procedures and regenerative braking. MDB plans to publish a summary report after the test concludes.

This story is developing. Check back for updates on MDB’s findings and Tesla’s response.