Hamilton Journal News

EPA sets strict emissions rules for heavy-duty trucks, buses

- By Matthew Daly and Tom Krisher

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Friday set strict emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks, buses and other large vehicles, an action that officials said will help clean up some of the nation’s largest sources of planet-warming greenhouse gases.

The new rules, which take effect for model years 2027 through 2032, will avoid up to 1 billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions over the next three decades and provide $13 billion in net benefits in the form of fewer hospital visits, lost work days and deaths, the EPA said. The new standards will especially benefit an estimated 72 million people in the United States who live near freight routes used by trucks and other heavy vehicles and bear a disproport­ionate burden of dangerous air pollution, the agency said.

“Heavy-duty vehicles are essential for moving goods and services throughout our country, keeping our economy moving. They’re also significan­t contributo­rs to pollution from the transporta­tion sector — emissions that are fueling climate change and creating poor air quality in too many American communitie­s,” EPA Administra­tor Michael Regan said.

“Reducing emissions from our heavy-duty vehicles means cleaner air and less pollution. It means safer and more vibrant communitie­s. It means lower fuel and maintenanc­e costs for truck owners and operators. And it means healthier Americans,” Regan said.

The new rules for heavy trucks and buses come a week after the EPA announced new automobile emissions standards for passenger vehicles. Those rules relax initial tailpipe limits proposed last year but get close to the same strict standards set out by the EPA for model year 2032.

The auto industry could meet the limits if 56% of new passenger vehicle sales are electric by 2032, along with at least 13% plug-in hybrids or other partially electric cars, the EPA said.

The rule for trucks is more complex, with a range of electric-vehicle or other non-traditiona­l sales projected, depending on the type of vehicle and use, the agency said. For instance, 30% of “heavy-heavy-duty vocational” trucks would need to be zero-emission by 2032, the EPA said, while 40% of short-haul “day cabs” would need be zero emission vehicles.

The new rules for cars and trucks come as sales of EVs, which are needed to meet both standards, have begun to slow. The auto industry cited lower sales growth in objecting to the EPA’s preferred standards unveiled last April for passenger vehicles, a key part of President Joe Biden’s ambitious plan to cut planet-warming emissions.

“Our Clean Trucks plan works in tandem with President Biden’s unpreceden­ted investment­s in America and delivers on this administra­tion’s commitment to tackling climate change while advancing environmen­tal justice,” Regan said.

The new rule will provide greater certainty for the industry, while supporting

U.S. manufactur­ing jobs in advanced vehicle technologi­es, Regan said. Over the next decade, the standards “will set the U.S. heavy-duty sector on a trajectory for sustained growth,” he said.

Industry groups strongly disagreed. They lambasted the new standards as unreachabl­e with current electric-vehicle technology and complained about a lack of EV charging stations and power grid capacity limits.

The American Trucking Associatio­ns and the Owner-Operator Independen­t Drivers Associatio­n, which represent large swaths of the industry, predicted supply chain failures and said that smaller independen­t firms would likely hang onto older diesel trucks that spew more pollution, running counter to the EPA’s goals.

 ?? MATT ROURKE / AP ?? The EPA on Friday, set new greenhouse gas emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks, buses and other large vehicles, an action that officials said will clean up some of the nation’s largest sources of planet-warming pollution.
MATT ROURKE / AP The EPA on Friday, set new greenhouse gas emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks, buses and other large vehicles, an action that officials said will clean up some of the nation’s largest sources of planet-warming pollution.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States