Title: Southeast Diesel Collaborative
1Southeast Diesel Collaborative
- Rachel White, EPA Region 4
- August 17, 2005
2Air Quality in Region 4
- Air quality concerns
- 90 Counties in non-attainment for 8-hr ozone,
population 16 million people - 47 Counties not attaining PM2.5 standard,
population 8 million people - Health concerns
- Premature death
- Diesel exhaust a possible human carcinogen
- Other respiratory system effects
3Diesel in the Southeast
4Diesel Success in Region 4
- Region 4 diesel programs include
- Retrofits
- Idle reduction
- Alternative fuels
- Outreach
- Leveraging resources
- GA ULSD
- NC retrofit program
5Diesel Projects in Region 4
6Region 4 Clean School Bus
- One of the first school bus retrofit programs in
the country - 1.45M ten projects totaling almost 2000 school
bus retrofits - Georgia was able to leverage CSB-USA funds for
other ULSD efforts - North Carolina and Tampa, FL have own programs
7Truck Stop Electrification
- 7 truck stops equipped with TSE technology
- Interstates 40 and 85 are national idle free
corridors - 30 SmartWay partners
- Future sites in TN, GA and FL
8Biodiesel in Region 4
- Coordinating with DOE and SEATF
- Available in all Region 4 states
- Municipal and state fleets NCDOT, Knox County,
etc. - Airports Orlando, coming soon
- Corporate fleets Georgia Power, Knoxville
Utilities, etc.
9Where to go from here?
10Building on Success
2004 Mobile Source PM2.5 Emissions, by Sector
11National Clean Diesel Campaign
- Consolidating diesel clean-up efforts in order to
protect health and allow nonattainment areas to
meet the NAAQS - Two components
- Regulations for new engines
- Voluntary programs for existing engines
- Five sectors
- School buses, Ports, Construction, Freight and
Agriculture
12Sector-Based Approach
- Clean Diesel Campaign approach announced at 2004
Conference, received support and endorsement from
broad coalition of stakeholders - Identify sector-specific incentives at federal,
state and local levels - Build broad-based regional collaboratives
- For more information see www.epa.gov/cleandiesel
13Region 4 Diesel Collaborative
- A coordinated approach to address the impacts of
diesel engines and fuel use in the Southeast. - Leverage resources to maximize benefits
- Limit duplication of effort
- Pool intellectual capital
14Collaborative Partners
- Government
- Federal, State and local air quality,
transportation, energy and agriculture agencies - Industry representatives
- Non-governmental organizations (e.g., ALA,
environmental orgs, community groups, academia,
etc.)
15Potential Target Sectors
- Construction
- Agriculture
- On-roadbuild on past successes
16Construction
- State and municipal fleet retrofits and
alternative fuels usage - Pilot projects
- Contract language
- Engage private sector in discussions
Sector Goal Secure funding to establish retrofit
projects, work with DOTs to create contract
provision language
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18Agriculture
- Retrofits (mobile equipment and ag pumps)
- SmartWay Transport Partnership
- Potential to create closed-loop biofuel crop
industry - Can replace less profitable crops
- Improves farmers bottom line, biodiesel better
for public health
Sector Goal Create partnerships, develop sector
strategy and pilot retrofit and other clean
diesel projects
19Potential Funding Sources
- Federal EPA (Clean School Bus, General
Retrofit), DoE (Clean Cities) and DOT (CMAQ) - State
- SEPs Settlements at federal and state levels
- Local funding (Tampa, FL)
- Corporate Sponsorship
- Creative financing
20Next Steps
- Near Term
- Outreach to potential partners
- Develop website
- Evaluate focus sectors
- Sign Collaborative Partnership commitments
- Solicit funding from within EPA for pilot
projects - Convene Collaborative partners meeting
- Develop specific project ideas, milestones
- Long Term
- Seek significant funding to expand to include new
partners and projects
21In Conclusion
- Need exists to reduce non-road diesel emissions
- Region 4 is in good position to leverage existing
successes to expand efforts - Potential partners have already expressed
interest - Region-wide network and technical resources
already exist that can be utilized to achieve
significant results in a timely manner
22For More Information
- Rachel White
- White.rachel_at_epa.gov
- 404.562.9044
- Dale Aspy
- Aspy.dale_at_epa.gov
- 404.562.9041
Alan Powell Powell.alan_at_epa.gov 404.562.9045