San Diego Union-Tribune

FAA: FUTURE PLANES WILL NEED TO REDUCE EMISSIONS

New rule would cover large airlines, business jets

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The Biden administra­tion proposed Wednesday that future planes produce lower levels of greenhouse gas emissions before they can be certified by federal regulators.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion proposal would increase fuel-efficiency standards for jets and large turboprop and propeller-driven planes that it has not yet certified and planes built after Jan. 1, 2028.

FAA said the rule, if made final, would cover new large airliners from both Boeing and Airbus, plus various business jets and other planes. The FAA said the rule would bring the United States in line with carbon dioxide emission standards set by the United Nation’s aviation organizati­on.

The rule would not cover planes that are already flying.

Planes are a small but growing contributo­r to greenhouse gas emissions that are tied to climate change. The FAA said civilian planes caused 3 percent of U.S. emissions before the pandemic.

Boeing and Airbus said they support efforts to reduce carbon emissions. Boeing praised the FAA’s approach of considerin­g a variety of measures — aerodynami­cs, engine technology, and lighter weight — to improve efficiency.

Environmen­talists have spent years pushing the government to regulate limits on heat-trapping emissions from planes.

In 2015, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency determined that aircraft emissions posed a health threat, a step that required EPA to draft rules. In response, in 2020 the Trump administra­tion announced a proposal that critics said would do little more than approve steps the aviation industry already supported to reduce fuel burn by new planes starting in 2028.

Last year, President Joe Biden touted an agreement with the airline industry to cut aircraft emissions 20 percent by the end of the decade and try to replace jet fuel with cleaner alternativ­es by 2050. Climate experts said the administra­tion’s approach, which assumed a rapid, exponentia­l increase in the production of sustainabl­e fuel, was unrealisti­c.

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