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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced the harsh greenhouse gas emissions standards for heavy-duty trucks, a move that has drawn fire from the trucking industry.
On Friday, March 29, the EPA announced a Final Rule to tighten standards on emissions for heavy-duty trucks for model years 2027 through 2032 as part of the agency’s larger Clean Trucks Plan.
The rule affects truck manufacturers and is “performance-based,” allowing truck makers to choose the technology required to achieve the set emissions standards, whether that be through “advanced internal combustion engine vehicles, hybrid vehicles, plug-in hybrid electric vehicles, battery electric vehicles, and hydrogen fuel cell vehicles.”
The agency says that the new emission standards will “avoid approximately 1 billion metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions from 2027 through 2055.”
The EPA introduced the rule in April 2023. The agency argues that they did relax the stringency of the rule somewhat based on feedback from industry stakeholders.
Both the American Trucking Associations (ATA) and the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA) have spoken out vehemently against the EPA final rule.
The ATA called the new emissions targets “unachievable” and warns that they will harm the supply chain and the U.S. economy. The group also says that the EPA is forcing trucking into investing massive amounts of money into unproven battery-electric and hydrogen technology in order to stay compliant.
“ATA opposes this rule in its current form because the post-2030 targets remain entirely unachievable given the current state of zero-emission technology, the lack of charging infrastructure and restrictions on the power grid,” said ATA President and CEO Chris Spear. “Given the wide range of operations required of our industry to keep the economy running, a successful emission regulation must be technology neutral and cannot be one-size-fits-all. Any regulation that fails to account for the operational realities of trucking will set the industry and America’s supply chain up for failure.”
OOIDA called Friday morning’s news from the EPA an “assault” on small business truckers.
Trucking groups are also concerned that the charging infrastructure needed to support the trucking industry’s transition to electric vehicles isn’t yet available.
Earlier this month, a study from the CFC stated that the cost for the infrastructure needed to fully electrify the U.S. trucking fleet would be approximately $1 trillion.