New Rules Would Cut Pollution from Buses, Big Rigs
New EPA regulations for heavy duty vehicles could reduce fuel consumption by 24 percent
By andBig rigs and other medium- and heavy-duty trucks plying U.S. highways may become much more fuel efficient if proposed on Friday by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency are finalized.
The rules, submitted as part of the Obama administration’s , seek to increase the fuel efficiency of big rigs, cut U.S. carbon dioxide emissions by 1 billion metric tons and reduce crude oil consumption by 1.8 billion barrels as a way to reduce the transportation sector’s impact on the climate.
McCabe said the rules would improve freight efficiency by between 50 and 90 percent.
“We’re delivering big time on President Obama’s call to cut carbon pollution,” EPA Administrator said in a statement. “With emission reductions weighing in at 1 billion tons, this proposal will save consumers, businesses and truck owners money; and at the same time spur technology innovation and job-growth, while protecting Americans’ health and our environment over the long haul.”
The big rig fuel economy standards come amid a flurry of greenhouse gas emissions reductions proposals from the federal government. Earlier in June, the EPA announced its intent to declare greenhouse gas emissions a threat to human health because of their role in exacerbating climate change. Later this summer, the EPA is expected to finalize much-contested rules that would cut carbon dioxide emissions from new and existing electric power plants that run on fossil fuels.
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