U.S. EPA to propose first-ever airplane emissions
standards, sources say
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[July 22, 2020] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) is set to announce on Wednesday the first
proposed U.S. emissions standards for commercial aircraft, officials
briefed on the matter said.
In 2016, the U.N. International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO)
agreed on global airplane emissions standards aimed at makers of small
and large planes, including Airbus SE <AIR.PA> and Boeing Co <BA.N>,
which both backed the standards.
The EPA-proposed regulation would align the United States with the ICAO
standards, officials said, and would apply to new type designs as of
January 2020 and to in-production airplanes or those with amended type
certificates starting in 2028. They would not apply to airplanes
currently in use.
EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler said in a statement to Reuters the
forthcoming airplane emissions proposal - along with other emissions
regulations - represented "sensible, legally defendable steps to
regulate greenhouse gases, while safeguarding American jobs and the
economy."
Aircraft account for 12% of all U.S. transportation greenhouse gas
emissions and 3% of total such U.S. emissions. They are the largest
source of transportation-related greenhouse gas emissions not subject to
standards.
EPA officials said it was crucial that the U.S. adopt the standards,
because countries could ban U.S.-assembled airplanes if they do not meet
ICAO standards. The EPA had said it would propose rules "at least" as
stringent as the ICAO's.
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Andrew Wheeler, Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), speaks during a Senate Environment and Public Works Committee
hearing, on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, U.S., May 20, 2020. Al
Drago/Pool via REUTERS
EPA is expected to finalize the rules next spring after public comments. The
Federal Aviation Administration will then issue separate rules to enforce the
standards, and the agency is expected to ultimately certify emissions compliance
by U.S. manufactured airplanes.
Some environmentalists argued the 2016 ICAO rules did not go far enough.
Under President Barack Obama, the EPA in 2016 declared aircraft emissions posed
a public health danger. In January,
environmental groups filed a notice of intent to sue EPA for failing to regulate
aircraft emissions.
Clare Lakewood, climate legal director at the Center for Biological Diversity,
said the Trump rules are not likely to require enough improvements.
"To help ward off the worst effects of climate change, we need effective,
technology-forcing standards to reduce airplane pollution," she said.
The EPA emissions proposal covers all large passenger jets, regional jets, large
turboprop airplanes, and some general aviation aircraft. Smaller turboprops,
helicopters and military aircraft are not covered.
(Reporting by David Shepardson. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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