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Truck Owners Need to Act Now to Reduce
Diesel Emissions January 1 Deadline for Diesel Filters is Fast
Approaching
SACRAMENTO - The California Air Resources Board today is reminding
owners of heavier diesel trucks that they need to act now in order
to comply with California's Truck and Bus Regulation, which has its
first diesel filter deadlines in January 2012.
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"Fleet owners need to plan now to equip their trucks with diesel
particulate matter filters in order to be ready in January," said
Assistant Chief of Mobile Sources Erik White, noting that the
process of ordering and installing equipment can take a few months.
"We continue to make tools available to help truckers better
understand the regulation as well as figure out which options make
the most sense for their businesses," White added. "There are also
several options available for funding."
The
regulation provides owners of heavier trucks and buses
(those with a Gross Vehicle Weight Rating greater than
26,000 lbs.) with two options to reduce diesel emissions.
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They can:
Follow a
staggered implementation schedule that requires 1996-1999 model
engines be retrofit with a diesel particulate matter (PM) filter by
January 1, 2012, or
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Use a flexible phase-in option that requires any 30 percent of
vehicles in the fleet to have a PM filter. (Note: this option
requires fleet owners to report information about all their heavier
vehicles to CARB by January 31, 2012. Fleets that report can also
take advantage of credits and special provisions.)
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Owners of small fleets (defined as one to three trucks with a GVWR
greater than 14,000 lbs.) can postpone the January 2012 compliance
requirement for their heavier trucks until 2014, but must report
their fleet information to CARB by January 31, 2012 in order to
receive the extension. Lighter diesel trucks with a GVWR of 14,001
to 26,000 pounds have no compliance requirements until 2015.
Business owners may find funding opportunities to upgrade their
fleets through either the Carl Moyer Program, which offers incentive
grants for buying cleaner-than-required engines yielding early or
extra emission reductions, or by using Proposition 1B funds, which
are available under the Goods Movement Emissions Reduction Program.
Truck owners seeking more information on compliance assistance and
funding opportunities can visit CARB's Truck Stop, call the Diesel
Hotline at 866-6-DIESEL (866-634-3735), or review the Truck and Bus
Regulation Fact Sheet.
Approved in 2008 and later amended in 2010 to provide more
flexibility for businesses, the Truck and Bus Regulation will
significantly reduce emissions from the nearly one million
heavy-duty diesel trucks that operate in California. The regulation
is one of several emission control measures that aggressively target
diesel pollution, which is associated with a host of health
ailments, including cancer. Diesel particulate filters remove 85
percent of the fine particle pollution found in diesel exhaust.
[Editor’s Note: For further details on the CARB Truck and Bus
Rule compliance schedule, please refer to the tables on the front
cover of the June 2011 Communicator.]
November 2011 - CMSA
Communicator
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