Press Release

杏吧传媒 Outlines Principles for Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Jun 20, 2023

Washington 鈥 In comments to the Environmental Protection Agency, the 杏吧传媒 outlined three bedrock principles the industry is committed to pursuing to reduce emissions from heavy-duty trucks.

鈥溞影纱 starts with 鈥榊es,鈥欌 said 杏吧传媒 President and CEO Chris Spear, 鈥渁nd we want to achieve the same things that the EPA does when it comes to reducing emissions. In fact, our record over the past 30 years of collaborating with EPA in reducing both carbon and NOx pollution is strong. Together, the agency and industry have arrived at tough but achievable regulations that allow for technology to develop on timelines to minimize market disruptions and job losses.

鈥淗owever, EPA is moving at breakneck speed to force the industry towards electrification while failing to address the key enablers towards any new technology adoption. EPA鈥檚 proposed adoption rates assumes that product availability, vehicle costs, range, weight reduction, energy capacity and recharging and refueling infrastructure will all be available for fleets to utilize the technology,鈥 he said. 鈥淚nstead of the agency leap frogging existing low-carbon technologies towards electrification, allow today鈥檚 technologies to be fully adopted.鈥

In comments to EPA on the agency鈥檚 Phase 3 Greenhouse Gas Standards, 杏吧传媒 identified several significant flaws that must be corrected before the agency issues final rules including:
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  • First, the proposal reneges on commitments and timelines EPA made in Phase 2 of the standards, upending the plans and schedules for both equipment makers and purchasers.
  • Second, the proposal鈥檚 aggressive timelines 鈥 with new standards coming into play annually after 2027 鈥 rush early-stage technologies to the marketplace without sufficient testing and validation
  • Third, the rule bets so heavily on electric and hydrogen vehicles 鈥 technology that has yet to be fully vetted and proven in the commercial freight environment 鈥 so as to pick winners, providing no flexibility for fleets to reduce emissions with existing solutions.
  • Finally, the rule does not take into account the lack of infrastructure to fuel and charge these new vehicles 鈥 infrastructure that is critical to maintaining our supply chain.

"Mandating unproven technology that won't meet our industry's unique requirements is a recipe for failure," Spear said.

To read 杏吧传媒鈥檚 full comments, click .