Release date: 9/30/2004
Contact Information: Leo Kay, 415-947-4306
SAN FRANCISCO -- At an event announcing the success of a $200,000 grant for truck idle reduction equipment in and around Sacramento, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency joined with a consortium of federal, state and local government agencies, non-profits and industry to kick off an unprecedented effort to reduce diesel emissions from trucks, ships, locomotives and other diesel sources along the West Coast.
Organized as the West Coast Diesel Emissions Reductions Collaborative, more than 400 interests are working together to find voluntary solutions, incentives and shared approaches to reducing diesel pollution in California, Oregon, Washington and Alaska sooner than federally mandated deadlines. Interests from British Columbia and Mexico have also joined this effort.
"The collaborative projects announced today will provide immediate health benefits for residents of the West Coast, especially for our children," said Wayne Nastri, EPA's administrator for the Pacific Southwest region. "Replacing old diesel engines with newer, cleaner models -- as well as providing cleaner fuel will quicken the pace toward the new EPA standards, providing a healthier, cleaner environment for everyone."
"The Carl Moyer Program has proven to be one of the most effective programs available to immediately reduce air pollution from diesel engines. Governor Schwarzenegger has used his leadership by providing a permanent funding source for the first time ever for this program. This action is an aggressive step towards our goal of greatly reducing air pollution in California and the efforts of the West Coast Collaborative are what is needed to make a difference regionally," said Terry Tamminen, Secretary of CalEPA.
The $200,000 grant is one of eight announcements along the West Coast totaling more than $6 million in funding from federal, state, local, non-profit and industry participants toward diesel pollution reduction. The collaborative's goal is to ultimately secure $100 million through this public/private partnership to address and solve the diesel pollution problems in the west, and achieve voluntary diesel reductions sooner than the deadlines set by the EPA's stringent new diesel standards that begin to take effect in 2008.
The Sacramento Municipal Utility District, the Electric Power Research Institute, the U.S. EPA, Sacramento Metropolitan Air Quality Management District, the California Energy Commission, the Department of Energy and industry partners have combined a total of $532,000 to install battery and grid powered electric air conditioners into trucks and also to install needed infrastructure at truck stops.
The alternate power enables truck operators to use electrical energy for needed in-truck appliances, like air conditioners and microwave ovens, instead of idling during rest periods. The EPA is funding half of the idle reduction equipment, and the other half is being funded by the trucking fleet. The fleets agreed to reinvest the annual cost savings resulting from the first year of operation of the equipment, estimated at $2,500 per truck. By year's end, the system will be in operation on at least 46 trucks.
The West Coast has numerous diesel sources from trucks traveling along the I-5 and I-99 corridors, to ships and trains along the Pacific coast, to agriculture equipment in California's Central Valley, to construction equipment operating in some of the fastest growing cities in the country, such as Los Angeles, Fresno, Seattle and Portland.
Seven other events held today announcing diesel pollution reduction projects along the West Coast include:
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