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May is Clean Air Month! -- May 2002
March 2002
NRDC Backgrounder
Green Diesel: Fact or Fiction?
Reducing Toxic Soot from Trucks and Buses
Contact: Craig Noble at NRDC (SF) (415)
777-0220, or Tammy Boyer (LA) (323) 934-6900
Todd Campbell at Coalition for Clean Air (310) 441-1544
The California Air Resources Board
(CARB) and ARCO are poised to release preliminary results from two studies
that appear to show that new, so-called "green" diesel buses are
as clean or cleaner than buses powered by compressed natural gas (CNG).
New diesel technology combines the use of specially formulated low-sulfur
fuel and emissions control devices called particulate (soot) traps. This
development comes as operators of transit, truck and school bus fleets are
choosing between diesel and alternative fuels to meet progressively more
stringent pollution standards.(1) While we support the cleanup of all diesels, the current
generation of so-called "green" diesels will not resolve all of
the environmental and health effects of diesel combustion. The sooty exhaust
from diesel-powered vehicles and machinery is a harmful air pollutant that
threatens public health. Below, NRDC and Coalition for Clean Air separate
fact from fiction in the debate over toxic soot.
The new studies are not apples to apples comparisons between diesel
and natural gas buses
The CARB and ARCO studies tested new diesel buses with particulate traps
against a natural gas bus with no pollution controls. In a fair comparison,
the natural gas bus would be equipped with the same technology. Particulate
traps have not been developed yet for natural gas fuel, but another device,
called an oxidation catalyst, has been used successfully to reduce precursors
to particulates, as well as carbon monoxide.(2) CARB is now going back and retesting the same natural
gas bus with the addition of an oxidation catalyst. However, until diesel
and natural gas buses are tested using comparable control technologies,
any conclusions about which is ultimately cleaner will be premature. Nonetheless,
the studies clearly show that uncontrolled CNG buses are far cleaner than
uncontrolled diesel buses.
Diesel exhaust control technology
still is unproven in real-world operating conditions
Optimism for cleaner diesel must be tempered
with caution. CARB has certified only two diesel particulate filters and
one Green Diesel Technology school bus. New technologies show the potential
to reduce soot emissions to very low levels, but potential and real-world
results are not the same. If the new technology fails, degrades, or is disengaged,
diesels will continue to pollute the air with black, toxic soot.
- Diesel buses and trucks tend to release much
more pollution particularly soot during real-world use than their original
certification tests indicate.(3) In contrast, natural gas vehicles usually maintain their
emission performance.(4)
- Today's traps are not durable over the lifetime
of trucks and buses. Particulate traps are certified to last only 150,000
miles,(5) about one-third of the useful lifetime of a transit bus.
There are no guarantees that traps will be replaced at the end of their
useful life, that they will be maintained properly, or that they will perform
consistently under the range of real-world operating conditions. Experience
with passenger vehicles demonstrates that control technologies must be
durable over the vehicle's life and that inspection and maintenance programs
are critical to ensure long-term performance. Yet no mandatory inspection
and maintenance programs exist to ensure that the new diesels will remain
as clean as they are claimed to be. _ Diesel particulate filters must be
used in conjunction with specially formulated low-sulfur fuel. They are
rendered useless when used with regular diesel, which contains high sulfur
levels.(6) However, the new low-sulfur fuel will not be widely available
until 2006.
- Existing diesel particulate filters cannot be
used on any vehicles manufactured before 1994.(7) This means that they can do nothing to prevent pollution
from the thousands of old, dirty diesel vehicles still on the road.
- Emissions controls are vulnerable to tampering.
In 1998, several large diesel engine manufacturers settled a lawsuit with
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and CARB, rather than face
trial in a case that resulted from a decade-long practice of designing
engines that met EPA's and CARB's emission standards in the laboratory,
yet emitted as much as three times as much smog-forming nitrogen oxides
at highway speeds.(8)
Diesel particulate filters may increase smog
So-called clean diesel vehicles equipped with particulate traps are
dirtier than older diesels in one respect: they produce more nitrogen dioxide.(9)
Nitrogen dioxide reacts to form ground-level ozone (smog). Most urban areas
in California already exceed state standards for this pernicious air pollutant.(10) The notoriously smoggy Los Angeles area tops the list of areas
with ozone problems in the United States. It is the only area designated
in extreme non-attainment with federal ozone standards.(11) A recent study by researchers at the University
of Southern California found that smog can cause childhood asthma.(12)
The toxic, sooty trail
of diesel exhaust is a well-known health hazard
Diesel exhaust contains at least 40 different substances recognized as
toxic air contaminants by CARB and is associated with severe health effects,
such as cancer and asthma.(13) CARB estimates that diesel exhaust alone causes
70 percent of Californians' risk of cancer from air pollution.(14) Diesel particulates are associated with serious
health effects ranging from heart and lung diseases to early death.(15)
California deserves clean vehicle technology
today
Natural gas is the cleanest fuel technology currently available. It is
inherently cleaner than diesel, producing fewer smog-forming nitrogen oxides
and virtually no visible soot from the tailpipe.(16) Diesel vehicles must use low-sulfur fuel and
sophisticated, foolproof pollution control equipment in order to come close
to the low soot emissions of a natural gas vehicle. Despite these problems,
new diesel technology can improve air quality, if used correctly in certain
applications, such as long haul trucks. Alternative fuels remain the best
choice for centrally fueled fleets, such as transit and school buses and
certain truck applications. Alternative fuel vehicles can and should become
even cleaner with the addition of new pollution controls.
The Natural Resources Defense Council is a national, non-profit organization
of scientists, lawyers and environmental specialists dedicated to protecting
public health and the environment. Founded in 1970, NRDC has more than
500,000 members nationwide, served from offices in New York, Washington,
Los Angeles and San Francisco. More information is available through NRDC's
Web site at www.nrdc.org.
The Coalition for Clean Air is the leading environmental organization dedicated
exclusively to restoring clean, healthy air to California. It has worked
with regulatory agencies in support of responsible, innovative, and effective
air quality improvement programs for many years. The Coalition continues
to work on the development and implementation of advanced transportation
technologies throughout California. For more information about the Coalition's
work, visit its site on the World Wide Web at www.coalitionforcleanair.org.
1 In February 2000, the California Air Resources Board (CARB) passed
a transit bus fleet rule requiring transit agencies to choose either a
diesel or alternative fuel path to meet progressively more stringent pollution
standards. http://www.arb.ca.gov/msprog/bus/bus.htm.
2 Nigel N. Clark
et. al., "Diesel and CNG Transit Bus Emissions Characterization by
Two Chassis Dynamometer Laboratories: Results and Issues", SAE Technical
Paper Series, 1999-01-1469.
3 S.H. Turner et.
al., "Comparison of In-Use Emission from Diesel and Natural Gas Trucks
and Buses. SAE 2000-01-3473. Warrendale, PA.: Society of Automotive Engineers. West Virginia University Transportable Heavy-Duty Vehicle Emissions Testing
Laboratory, "Exhaust Emissions Test Results Report of Raley's distribution
Center Tractors," In Gas Research Institute (GRI), 1997.
4 ibid.
5 CARB Verification
Letters; http://www.arb.ca.gov/diesel/documents/verifieddevices.htm
6 P. Monahan, "Pollution
Report Card: Grading America's School Bus Fleets," Union of Concerned
Scientists, February 2002.
7 CARB website.
8 ibid.
9 Gragg, Kerstin.
"Efficiency of a catalytic muffler and CRTTM systems for heavy duty
vehicles," a report for MTC AB; report no. MTC 5111, 2001. Presentation by Don McNerny, CARB, at the International Diesel Retrofit
Advisory Committee meeting, Los Angeles, CA, October 2001.
10 The 2001 California
Almanac of Emissions and Air Quality, CARB, April 2001, http://www.arb.ca.gov/aqd/almanac01/almanac01.htm
The Greenbook: Nonattainment Areas for Criteria Pollutants, EPA, 2002,
http://www.epa.gov/oar/oaqps/greenbk
11 ibid.
12 McConnell R,
Berhane K, Gilliland F, London SJ, Islam T, Gauderman WJ, Avol E, Margolis
HG, Peters JM. Asthma in exercising children exposed to ozone: a cohort
study. Lancet 359:386-91, 2002.
13 Cal. EPA, Proposed
Identification of Diesel Exhaust as a Toxic Air Contaminant Report, April
1998.
Health Effects of Diesel Exhaust Fact sheet, Office of Environmental Health
Hazard Assessment, Cal. EPA, (www.oehha.ca.gov/public_info/facts/dieselfacts.html). Pandya RJ, Solomon G, Kinner A, Balmes JR. Diesel exhaust and asthma: Hypotheses
and molecular mechanisms of action. Environmental Health Perspectives;
110(Suppl 1):103-112, 2002.
14 South Coast Air
Quality Management District, "Multiple Air Toxics Exposure Study in
the South Coast Air Basin (MATES-II)" March 2000.
15 Shprentz D, "Breathtaking:
Premature Mortality Due to Particulate Air Pollution in 239 American Cities",
NRDC, New York, May 1996.
Increased Particulate Air Pollution and the Triggering of Myocardial Infarction,
Peters, Dockery, Muller and Mittleman, Circulation 2001 June 12; 103(23):2810-5.
Samet JM. Fine particulate air pollution and mortality in 20 U.S. cities.
New England Journal of Medicine 343, 2000: 1742-1749. Dockery DW. "Epidemiologic
Evidence of Cardiovascular Effects of Particulate Air Pollution."
Environmental Health Perspectives, 109, 2001: 483-486.
16 Natural Gas Buses:
Separating Myth from Fact; Clean Cities Alternative Fuel Information Series;
U.S. Department of Energy; May 2000.
Five Local
Governments Commit to Purchase Cleaner Vehicles
-- American Lung Association of California Pushes for More
-- Statewide Campaign Raises Awareness about Diesel Exhaust, Particulate Matter
and Cleaner Alternatives during Clean Air Month
(News Release -- May 15, 2002)
Print Ads: Theres Even More You Should Know About Diesel
View or Download Ads
Theres Even More You Should Know About Clearing the Air
(Clean Air Tips)
California Air District Resource Directory
2002
Theres Even More You Should Know About Diesel
Frequently Asked Questions About Diesel Fuel
Particulate Matter Air Pollution - Theres Even More You Should Know About Particulate Matter
Public Health and Diesel
Fact Sheet
Renewable Energy - Theres Even More You Should Know About Renewable Energy
Theres Even More You Should Know About Smart Growth, Urban Sprawl, Air Quality and Health
Fact Sheet
Clean Air Month 2002 Proclamation
Sample Proclamation for California Cities & Counties
Milestones in Air Pollution History
American Lung Association Timeline
Cleaner Fuels -- Theres Even More You Should Know About Cleaner Vehicles
Environmental Justice
Fact Sheet
Position Statement: Reducing Public Exposure To Diesel Emissions From Heavy Duty Vehicles
Green Diesel: Fact or Fiction? Reducing Toxic Soot from Trucks and Buses
(Backgrounder from Natural Resources Defense Council and Coalition for Clean Air)
From Breathe Easy Magazine, Spring/Summer 2002:
Cover Story: Smog and Your Lungs
Public Policy Update: Association Works to Reduce Diesel Exhaust
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