Houston Chronicle

EPA says standards for trucks to tighten

- By Brady Dennis

WASHINGTON — The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Tuesday announced plans to place more stringent restrictio­ns on pollution from heavy-duty trucks in a move that won the Trump administra­tion rare praise from environmen­tal groups.

Nearly two decades have passed since the EPA last updated its standards for emissions of nitrogen oxide, or NOx, that govern the nation’s heavy-duty trucking fleet. Two years ago, 20 state and local air regulators, backed by public health groups, petitioned the agency to revamp its regulation­s of NOx, citing adverse effects on health and air quality.

At the time, the agency agreed that changes were necessary, “particular­ly in areas of the country with elevated levels of air pollution.” Obama administra­tion officials said they planned to work with states such as California, the industry and others toward creating an updated national set of standards.

On Tuesday, the EPA appeared to be carrying on that work to scale back emissions of the poisonous gases, which form when fuel is burned at high temperatur­es. The agency did not issue a specific proposal — that is unlikely to come until 2020 — but officials said they plan to begin a formal rule-making process for what they called the Cleaner Trucks Initiative.

“This initiative will help modernize heavy-duty truck engines, improving their efficiency and providing cleaner air for all Americans,” EPA Acting Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler said in a call with reporters. “We are under no regulatory or court order requiremen­ts to launch this initiative. We are doing it because it’s good for the environmen­t.”

Environmen­tal advocates, who have fiercely opposed the administra­tion’s efforts to roll back dozens of Obama-era regulation­s, including those aimed at combating climate change, reacted to Tuesday’s news with cautious optimism.

“This is a positive step and may be the first thing this EPA has done that will actually reduce air pollution,” said Paul Billings, senior vice president for public policy at the American Lung Associatio­n.

Industry groups also welcomed the EPA’s announceme­nt.

“This new initiative sets the next chapter for diesel technology,” said Allen Schaeffer, executive director of the Diesel Technology Forum, which represents engine manufactur­ers and suppliers. He said the effort probably will result in cleaner engines that perform better, last longer and improve air quality. “It’s the beginning of a journey, but I think a good one.”

Tuesday’s push for tighter tailpipe pollution standards for heavy-duty trucks seems at odds with the deregulato­ry push that has defined the Trump administra­tion. Even as he announced the initiative on a call with reporters, Wheeler boasted about the more than two dozen regulatory rollbacks the agency has set in motion, while noting that greenhouse gas emissions from major industrial sources have fallen slightly in recent years.

“The Trump administra­tion has proven that burdensome federal regulation­s are not necessary to drive environmen­tal progress,” he said.

Since the Trump administra­tion took office, the EPA has sought to undo Obama-era regulation­s to limit methane emissions, reduce carbon dioxide emissions from power plants, reconsider rules around the disposal of coal waste and slow requiremen­ts to make passenger cars more efficient.

Under then-Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, the EPA last year also proposed repealing tighter emissions standards for “glider” trucks, which use older engines that emit dozens of times as much soot and contaminan­ts as newer ones. The agency later backed off the proposal, though it has not made a final decision.

Bill Wehrum, head of the EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation, took issue with the notion that Tuesday’s announceme­nt was one of the few actions the Trump EPA had taken to actually combat air pollution.

“We have moved forward with a series of very important rule-makings,” Wehrum told reporters, “and the goal of every single one of them is to try to reduce emissions, but to do it in the smartest way possible and most efficient way possible and most cost-effective way possible.”

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