Remove Cost Remove Ozone Remove Sacramento Remove Standards
article thumbnail

California adopts comprehensive strategy to meet federal ozone standard over next 15 years

Green Car Congress

The California Air Resources Board today approved a statewide plan for attaining the federal health-based standard for ozone, typically experienced as smog. The 2022 State Implementation Plan Strategy identifies the state’s control strategy for meeting the federal 70 parts per billion, 8-hour ozone standard over the next 15 years.

Ozone 195
article thumbnail

EPA Proposes New Tougher Ground-Level Ozone Standards

Green Car Congress

Counties projected to violate proposed Primary 8-hour Ground-Level Ozone Standards in 2020. The United States Environmental Protection Agency has proposed the strictest standards to date for ground-level ozone. EPA is proposing an accelerated schedule for designating areas for the primary ozone standard.

Ozone 186
article thumbnail

CARB staff proposing amendments to Fill Pipes specs for gasoline-fueled cars

Green Car Congress

These releases increase emissions of toxic air pollutants such as benzene as well as reactive organic gases that can react with other air pollutants to form ozone. The performance leak standard will quantify an allowable leak rate between the fill pipe face and the nozzle boot.

Gasoline 210
article thumbnail

California ARB greenlights states GHG cap-and-trade program

Green Car Congress

At its meeting in Sacramento yesterday, the California Air Resources Board (ARB) endorsed the state’s cap-and-trade regulation. The program is designed to provide covered entities the flexibility to seek out and implement the lowest-cost options to reduce emissions. Covered entities must reduce emissions or.

article thumbnail

California Energy Commission adopts $100M investment plan for 2013-2014 for green vehicles and fuels

Green Car Congress

These incentives help to pay the difference between the cost of alternative-fuel vehicles and conventional vehicles. City of Sacramento will receive $600,000 to install new liquefied natural gas (LNG) fueling equipment and refurbish existing LNG equipment in the city’s corporate yard in the south area of the city.