For Immediate Release:
October 15, 2012
Contact: Michael Ardito,
415-972-3081, ardito.michael@epa.gov
U.S. EPA Awards Over $5 Million to California for Clean
Diesel Projects
"Five major metropolitan areas in California, some with the poorest air quality in the nation, have received grant funds specifically targeting projects to reduce diesel emissions,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “Employees, residents, and visitors in those areas will be able to breathe cleaner, healthier air. Awarding these grants for important diesel emission reduction projects demonstrates how collaboration amongst public and private partners can benefit everyone.”
The West Coast Collaborative administers the Diesel
Emission Reduction Act (DERA) program in California. The DERA program is
designed to help owners and operators replace, retrofit or repower older medium
and heavy-duty diesel-powered engines like those that operate in marine vessels,
port equipment locomotives, construction and agriculture equipment, trucks and
buses.
The California competitive DERA grant projects and
funding amounts announced today are:
- South Coast Air Quality Management District received $1,045,993 to replace approximately 50 dirty, old, medium-duty urban delivery diesel trucks with fully electric delivery trucks. The project will focus on replacing trucks that are model year 2003 or older, whose principal operations are in highly impacted communities in the south coast region. These vehicles produce no tailpipe emissions, so the air quality benefits and fuel reductions prove significant. The annual emission reductions for 50 trucks include the following: 11.79 tons of nitrogen oxides (NOx), 0.48 tons of particulate matter (PM), 1.16 tons of hydrocarbons (HC), 5.61 tons of carbon monoxide (CO), and 707 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2).
- City of Long Beach – Harbor Department received $1,344,146 to reduce diesel emissions by retrofitting and/or replacing sixteen pieces of port cargo handling equipment at the Port of Long Beach terminals including the replacement of yard tractors with zero-emission automated guided vehicles (AGV) that use battery cells and the exhaust retrofit of rubber tired gantry cranes. This project will achieve emissions reductions ahead of regulatory compliance dates and will reduce 25 tons of NOx, 173 tons of CO, 33 tons of PM, and 733 tons of CO2 over the life of the project.
- Bay Area Air Quality Management District received $898,833 to replace at least 22 dirty, old heavy-duty drayage trucks with cleaner, newer ones that operate at or around ports in the Bay Area. The project will focus on replacing trucks that are model year 2003 or older, whose principal operations are in highly impacted communities. This truck replacement project will reduce 278 tons of NOx, 24.7 tons of PM, 18.4 tons of HC, and 100 tons of CO emissions during the project life, or 10 years.
- San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District received $898,833 to replace at least 35 heavy-duty, long-haul waste transporting diesel trucks in the San Joaquin Valley with newer, cleaner model year engines that meet or exceed 2011 emission standards. (These trucks operate in areas that receive a disproportionate amount of air emissions, such as Kettleman City.) The life of the cleaner, lower emission trucks is approximately 1 to 1.5 million vehicle miles traveled, thus operating for at least ten years. These trucks will achieve up to a 97 percent reduction of PM and up to 94 percent reduction of NOx, equating to lifetime emission reductions of 1,249 tons of NOx, 50 tons of PM, 54 tons of HC, and 388 tons of COx.
- Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality Management District received $700,000 to repower a locomotive engine built in 1979 to the cleanest available level. The locomotive operates along corridors in the Sacramento, San Joaquin Valley and San Francisco Bay areas. Over the life of this project emissions will be reduced by 647 tons of NOx, 34 tons of PM 2.5, and 49 tons of HC.
The California state allocation DERA grant
also announced today is for $454,899 to the California Air Resources Board
(CARB) to help retrofit school buses throughout California. Through a
partnership project between CARB and the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution
Control District (SJVAPCD), 37 heavy-duty school buses operating throughout
California will install verified diesel particulate filters (DPF). CARB will
provide $322,101 in additional funds to support this project. This retrofit
project is expected to reduce 5 tons of PM, 7 tons of HC, and 43 tons of CO
emissions during its operational life. Retrofitting these school buses will
reduce harmful diesel emissions, resulting in a reduction in children’s exposure
to diesel exhaust.
Diesel engines are durable, fuel-efficient workhorses in
the American economy. However, older diesel engines that predate newer, cleaner
standards emit large amounts of air pollutants, such as NOx and PM. These
pollutants are linked to health problems, including asthma, lung and heart
disease and even premature death. Clean diesel projects funded through these
grants nationwide will work to address the more than 11 million older diesel
engines that continue to emit higher levels of
pollution.
In this year’s competition, winners were selected based
on a proposal’s potential for maximizing health and environmental benefits by
targeting areas that have significant air quality issues. Reduced air pollution
from diesel engines in these areas can have a direct and significant impact on
community health.
New this year is an increased funding availability per
award that will allow EPA to target larger engines used in marine vessels and
locomotives, which will result in significant emissions reduced per
engine.
DERA was enacted in 2005 and since it was first funded in
fiscal year 2008, EPA has awarded over 500 grants nationwide. These projects
have reduced hundreds of thousands of tons of air pollution and saved millions
of gallons of fuel. More on the grants and the National Clean Diesel Campaign
may be found at: http://www.epa.gov/cleandiesel .
Along the Pacific Coast states, these projects are part
of the West Coast Collaborative. The Collaborative is part of the National Clean
Diesel Campaign. On the West Coast, it is a an ambitious partnership between
leaders from federal, state, and local government, the private sector and
environmental groups committed to reducing diesel emissions. Partners come from
all over the Western North America, including Alaska, Arizona, California,
Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, the Pacific Island Territories of
American Samoa, Guam, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands, and
Canada and Mexico.
More information about
the West Coast Collaborative may be found at: http://www.westcoastcollaborative.org .
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