The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said it was
seeking input in its $3 billion Clean Ports Program to reduce
pollutants at U.S. ports and its $1 billion Clean Heavy-Duty
Vehicle Program to reduce vehicle emissions near ports and other
truck routes. EPA wants details about the availability, market
price, and performance of zero-emission trucks, zero-emission
port equipment, electric charging and other infrastructure needs
for zero-emission technologies.
White House National Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi said the program
is addressing "pernicious pollution pumping through our port
communities by making investments and setting standards that
will spur a shift away from dirty diesel to clean, American-made
technologies."
Zaidi told Reuters that ports account for a significant share of
emissions. "They are pockets of concentrated pollution," Zaidi
said. "You can be accelerating in the direction of more
productive, more efficient hubs of economic activity but we can
cut emissions at the same time."
Earlier this year, the EPA finalized new clean air standards for
heavy duty trucks for the first time in more than two decades
that are 80% more stringent than current standards. The EPA
estimates that by 2045, the rule will result in up to 2,900
annual fewer premature deaths, 1.1 million fewer lost school
days for children and $29 billion in annual net benefits.
The Senate voted 50-49 last week to overturn those rules that
aim to drastically cut smog- and soot-forming emissions from
heavy-duty trucks but President Joe Biden has promised to veto
the measure.
The EPA proposed in April new sweeping cuts to medium- and
heavy-duty tailpipe emissions limits.
"Folks who live near ports know air pollution can be extreme,
because all trucks and all the vehicles moving goods in and out
of ports and on the backs of ship are polluting the air
significantly," Biden said in April.
California regulators last week approved new rules requiring all
medium- and heavy-duty vehicles sold in the state in 2036 be
zero-emission and new reduced emission regulations for
locomotives. Big rigs, local delivery and government fleets must
transition to zero emission by 2035, garbage trucks and local
buses by 2039, and sleeper cab tractors and specialty vehicles
by 2042.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Diane Craft)
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