Marin Independent Journal

California to expand emissions testing

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California on Thursday dedicated a new $419 million research facility that will allow state air quality regulators to expand emissions testing for heavy duty vehicles like trucks, buses and bulldozers.

The center in the city of Riverside will allow for more checks on the heavy vehicles in addition to the emission tests conducted on passenger cars. It replaces a nearly 50-year-old lab in nearby El Monte that state officials credited with helping to detect the Volkswagen diesel emissions cheating scandal.

Until now, heavy duty vehicles haven’t been subject to the same level of scrutiny as passenger cars because of restrained capacity at the older lab, said Annette Hébert, deputy executive officer of the Southern California headquarte­rs for the California Air Resources Board.

“As soon as I get my lab going, there are very specifical­ly some heavy duty (vehicles) I want to look at,” Hébert said. “Part of the reason I am concerned about heavy duty (vehicles) is because of our lack of capacity to help keep them in check.”

The 402,000 square foot (37,347 square meter) facility will test emissions from cars, trucks, buses, motorcycle­s, lawnmowers, marine engines and other vehicles. Its testing capacity will be twice that of the older lab for smaller vehicles such as passenger cars and six times more for heavy duty vehicles, including buses and off-road equipment, agency officials said.

In the future, Hébert said she hopes the facility will also conduct battery testing on electric vehicles to ensure they fulfill their life expectancy — yet another way to encourage California­ns to move toward cleaner transporta­tion.

California, which is home to about 40 million people, has long been viewed as a leader on clean air regulation­s.

At a dedication event Thursday for the emissions testing center, local officials recalled growing up and living decades ago in a state where the skies were often too hazy to see nearby mountains and air quality warnings were commonplac­e — something State Senator Richard Roth noted is no longer case in the Riverside County communitie­s he represents.

“Obviously we have much much more work to do but what an amazing result,” said Roth, a Democrat.

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