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Fuel
efficiency standards for trucks proposed by EPA
The United States Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced
the first national standards to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions
and improve fuel efficiency of heavy-duty trucks and buses.
The EPA along with the Department of Transportation have introduced
first of their kind regulations that call for a 20 percent reduction
in heavy vehicle emissions by 2018, which would require boosting
fuel efficiency to an average of 8 miles per gallon, compared
with an estimated 6 mpg now. This comprehensive national program
is projected to reduce GHG emissions by about 250 million metric
tons and save 500 million barrels of oil over the lives of the
vehicles produced within the program’s first five years.
EPA and DOT’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
(NHTSA) are proposing new standards for three categories of heavy
trucks: combination tractors, heavy-duty pickups and vans, and
vocational vehicles. The categories were established to address
specific challenges for manufacturers in each area. For combination
tractors, the agencies are proposing engine and vehicle standards
that begin in the 2014 model year and achieve up to a 20 percent
reduction in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and fuel consumption
by 2018 model year.
For heavy-duty pickup trucks and vans, the agencies are proposing
separate gasoline and diesel truck standards, which phase in
starting in the 2014 model year and achieve up to a 10 percent
reduction for gasoline vehicles and 15 percent reduction for
diesel vehicles by 2018 model year (12 and 17 percent respectively
if accounting for air conditioning leakage). Lastly, for vocational
vehicles, the agencies are proposing engine and vehicle standards
starting in the 2014 model year which would achieve up to a 10
percent reduction in fuel consumption and CO2 emissions by 2018
model year.
Overall, NHTSA and EPA estimate that the heavy-duty national
program would provide $41 billion in net benefits over the lifetime
of model year 2014 to 2018 vehicles. With the potential for significant
fuel efficiency gains, ranging from 7 to 20 percent, drivers
and operators could expect to net significant savings over the
long-term. For example, it is estimated an operator of a semi
truck could pay for the technology upgrades in under a year,
and save as much as $74,000 over the truck’s useful life. Vehicles
with lower annual miles would typically experience longer payback
periods, up to four or five years, but would still reap cost-savings.
EPA and NHTSA are providing a 60-day comment period that begins
when the proposal is published in the Federal Register.
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