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October/November 2007
Print Version
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Climate Bill Targets Transportation Emissions, Lacks VMT Reduction
Greenhouse
gas (GHG) emissions from the transportation sector are treated as a
special case by a draft climate bill now moving through the Senate
Environment and Public Works Committee. “America’s Climate Security
Act” S.2191,
sponsored by Senators Lieberman (D-CT) and Warner (R-VA), takes an
“upstream” approach to the transportation sector, choosing to regulate
refiners and importers of transportation fuels, as opposed to
“downstream” fuel users. The bill proposes a downstream approach for
other regulated energy use sectors, including electric utilities and
industrial users as “covered facilities”.
Covered
facilities in the bill will be required to obtain allowances for the
GHG emissions for which they are responsible under the provisions of
the bill. These allowances will be distributed to regulated entities
through a proposed schedule of free and auctioned allowances, with the
total number of allowances and the percentage of free allowances
declining over time through 2050.
For
transportation, overall GHG emissions and future reductions are a
function of vehicle fuel economy, fuel type, and vehicle use. Fuel
economy standards are not addressed in the Lieberman-Warner bill, but
are being debated in the context of other legislation. Funding for
vehicle and fuel technology improvements could be a designated use of
auction proceeds in the climate bill; however, vehicle use is not
addressed at all in the current draft.
Trends
in vehicle use, as measured by vehicle-miles-traveled (VMT), have been
steadily increasing nationally and are projected to continue to
increase unless transportation policies and current development growth
patterns change. Growing Cooler, a new collaborative report
on the connection between urban development and climate, estimates that
growth in VMT, if uncurbed, would counteract many, if not all,
greenhouse gas reductions prescribed by targets set in the Kyoto
Protocol.
Overall, the bill as drafted raises at least three key questions for the transportation sector:
1)
How will refiners and importers respond to a cap on emissions for which
they have limited control, unlike other more regulated sectors in the
bill?
2) How might proceeds from proposed auctioning of emission allowances be used to reduce transportation-related GHG emissions?
3)
Should the bill include policy and funding mechanisms to address
vehicle use, as measured by total vehicle-miles traveled (VMT)?
Transportation
accounts for about 28 percent of all U.S. GHG emissions, second only to
electricity utilities which generate approximately 34 percent.
To review a copy of Growing Cooler: the Evidence on Urban Development and Climate Change, published by the Urban Land Institute, please visit:
http://www.uli.org/AM/Template.cfm?Section=Home&CONTENTID=104276&TEMPLATE=/CM/ContentDisplay.cfm
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House Committee Advances Bill for Energy Storage Systems
The
House Science and Technology Subcommittee on Energy and Environment
recently moved forward with legislation focused on energy storage
technologies and industrial energy efficiency research and
development. “The Energy Storage Technology Advancement Act of 2007” (H.R. 3776), passed and was referred by the House to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.
The
bill calls for research and development of competitive energy storage
systems for stationary and vehicular applications-- both of which could
provide significant economic and environmental benefits if achieved.
Demonstration projects are to be carried out by the Department of
Energy (DOE).
Major provisions of the bill include:
- Basic
research in areas including: materials design; materials synthesis and
characterization; electrolytes; surface and interface dynamics;
modeling and simulation; and thermal behavior and life degradation
mechanisms. The bill authorizes $50 million for each of the fiscal
years 2009-2014.
- Applied
research in areas including: ultracapacitors; flywheels; batteries and
battery systems (including flow batteries); compressed air energy
systems; power conditioning electronics; manufacturing technologies for
energy storage systems; thermal management systems; and hydrogen as an
energy storage medium. $80 million is authorized for each of the fiscal
years 2009-2014.
- Transportation
energy storage demonstrations in areas such as advanced vehicle battery
technologies and related components, and new manufacturing technologies
for these devices. The program will demonstrate one or more of the
following:
- Novel,
high capacity, high efficiency energy storage, charging, and control
systems, along with the collection of data on performance
characteristics such as battery life, energy storage capacity, and
power delivery capacity.
- Advanced
onboard energy management systems and highly efficient battery cooling
systems, with, integration of such systems on a prototype vehicular
platform, new technologies and processes that reduce manufacturing
costs and, integration of advanced vehicle technologies with
electricity distribution system and smart metering technology.
- A
program of research, development, and demonstration of secondary
applications of energy storage devices following service in electric
drive vehicles, and of technologies and processes for final recycling
and disposal of those devices. $5 million is authorized for each of the
fiscal years 2009 through 2014.
- Six
large-scale demonstrations of electricity storage to meet specific
goals, such as integrating renewable energy technologies into electric
power supply. Each of the following objectives need to be included in
at least one of these technology demonstrations:
- Energy
storage to improve the feasibility of micro-grids or islanding, or the
transmission and distribution capability to improve reliability in
rural areas.
- Integration of an energy storage system with self-healing circuits.
- Use of energy storage to improve security to emergency response infrastructure.
- Integration with a renewable energy production source, either at the source or away from the source.
- Use
of energy storage to provide ancillary services, such as frequency
response or spinning reserve services, for grid management.
- Advancement
of power conversion systems to make them smarter, more efficient, able
to communicate with other inverters, and able to control voltage.
- Use
of energy storage to optimize transmission and distribution operation
and power quality, which could address overloaded lines and maintenance
of transformers and substations.
- Use of advanced energy storage for peak shaving by homes, businesses, or the grid.
- Use
of energy storage devices such as plug-in hybrid vehicles to fill up
the night time valley for electricity demand to make better use of
existing grid assets (Vehicle-to-Grid, V2G).
- Cost sharing to be carried out in accordance with EPACT 2005.
- $30 million to be authorized for each of the fiscal years 2009-2014.
For updates on the progress of H.R. 3776, please visit:
http://www.thomas.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:HR03776:@@@X
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California Sues EPA Over Carbon Emissions Standards for Automobiles
California
Attorney General Jerry Brown announced recently that the state has sued
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in an attempt to force
the agency to decide whether to let California and 11 other states
enforce stricter emissions standards for certain vehicles.
California
first asked the EPA to rule on whether the state could impose stricter
regulations on emissions of greenhouse gases from cars, pick up trucks
and SUVs in December of 2005. Now 22 months later, the state is still
committed to implementing a 2002 state law that would require
automakers to begin making vehicles that emits significantly lower
greenhouse gases by model year 2009.
The
law, which if implemented would result in a one-quarter reduction in
emissions by 2030, can only take effect if the EPA grants California a
waiver under the Clean Air Act. Hearings held by the EPA this past
summer regarding the state’s waiver request resulted in the EPA
promising a decision by the end of the year, which the agency still
intends to make, according to EPA spokeswoman Jennifer Wood. In
addition, the agency also plans to introduce new, comprehensive
national standards for vehicle emissions.
According
to state officials, Washington, Pennsylvania and Connecticut plan to
join California in the lawsuit. Although the federal government
regulates national air quality rules, under the Clean Air Act,
California has unique authority to pass its own standards—given EPA
approval. Other states may then abide by either the federal rules or
California standards, if they are more stringent.
If
California receives the waiver from EPA, eleven other
states—Washington, Oregon, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New
York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont and Maine—are
set to adopt its emissions standards. Additionally, the governors of
Arizona, New Mexico and Florida have made tentative commitments to
implement California’s standards.
In
opposition, the Association of International Automobile Manufacturers,
which represents 14 foreign auto companies including Toyota, Honda and
Nissan, will counter sue to block the standards from being adopted.
The organization argues that stricter emissions standards would
increase vehicle sale prices and could force manufacturers to
discontinue certain pick up and SUV models.
The
Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers also opposes the EPA granting
California a waiver, arguing there should be one federally regulated
national standard for tailpipe emissions.
For more information from the Office of the Attorney General, see: http://ag.ca.gov/newsalerts/release.php?id=1490

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G.M. Announces New Independent Hybrid Research Center in China
General
Motors Corporation (GM) announced recently that it will build an
advanced research center in Shanghai to develop hybrid technology. GM
already has a 1,300-employee research center in the city with its
Chinese counterpart, the Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation
(SAIC). The new, independently-owned facility is intended to pursue
the most advanced vehicle engineering and development and could help GM
maintain greater control over new technologies as opposed to research
conducted jointly, as it is with SAIC.
A
primary motivation for GM’s decision to pursue independent research in
China is that the company’s sales there have increased to an estimated
1 million units this year alone, up from 20,000 in 1999. Rick Wagoner,
GM’s chairman and chief executive, believes that it is essential to do
advanced hybrid technology research in China so that technological
improvements can be quickly made to locally sold models.
In
recent years, automakers in China have caused controversy by
introducing vehicles that some consider identical to those produced by
western auto companies. However, there has been no accusation of a
Chinese auto company replicating advanced western engine technology.
With these issues in mind, Wagoner does not think matters of
intellectual property will be an issue for GM and that pursuing
cutting-edge research in China will be a manageable risk as well as a
prudent trade-off.
The new research
center will work on electric vehicle technology, including hybrid
development and fuel cells, energy efficiency in the manufacturing
process, and the use alternative fuels such as ethanol. This could
bode well for GM products in the Chinese market as the country’s
powerful National Development and Reform Commission recently disclosed
that it is drafting strict local content rules for alternative fuel
vehicles to qualify for likely government subsidies.
Other
foreign automakers, including Volkswagen, Honda and Ford, have each
announced plans to open research centers in China, although none have
been as aggressive as GM in shifting technology to China.
More information available on GM’s website at: http://www.gm.com/corporate/about/news/index.jsp?deep=press

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EPA Certifies First E85 Conversion Kit for Gasoline Engines
A
kit for converting conventional gasoline-fueled vehicles to run on
fuels containing up to 85 percent ethanol (E85) has, for the first
time, been certified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
for use in select vehicle models. The “Flex-Box Smart Kit”
manufactured by Flex Fuel US has
been developed for use on vehicles common to many police, taxi, and
government fleets, such as the Ford Crown Victoria, Mercury Grand
Marquis, and Lincoln Town Car using a Ford 4.6-liter engine. Flex-Fuel
US is also seeking and anticipating EPA approval for kits suitable for
other makes and models of passenger vehicles, light trucks, and
performance vehicles.
Fleet operators and
individual car owners can have these conversion kits installed at AAMCO
Transmission Centers, as part of their new “Eco-green Auto Service”
program. AAMCO has more than 700 locations nationwide.
The
compact conversion unit mounts in the engine compartment and controls
fuel injection levels by continuously monitoring emissions and engine
performance. The unit adjusts the fuel mix to allow the engine to
operate at optimal performance regardless of the fuel blend in the tank.
While other E85 conversion options are available, they would likely be
illegal according to the EPA. Certification by the agency requires
testing of the emissions profile after the conversion has been
installed, to ensure compliance with federal air quality regulations
and emissions standards.
Converting a conventional vehicle to a flexible-fuel vehicle yields several benefits, including:
- An approximate 15 percent per gallon fuel cost saving over gasoline
- Increased horsepower
- Support for domestically-source fuels and enhanced energy security
- Potential reductions in overall greenhouse gas emissions
A copy of EPA’s Updated Certification for Alternative Fuel Converters is available at: http://www.epa.gov/otaq/cert/dearmfr/cisd0602.pdf

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2008 Guide Rates Most Least-Efficient Vehicles
Earlier
this year, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced it
was finalizing updated fuel economy standards for all new cars and
light trucks sold in the United States beginning in 2008. In support
of these new methods, EPA and the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) have
released the 2008 Fuel Economy Guide.
In
an effort to better reflect current driving conditions and habits and
ultimately improve fuel economy, new test methods have been designed
which take into account factors such as higher average driving speeds,
quicker acceleration, the impacts of air-conditioning use during
vehicle operation and how vehicles are affected during operation in
cold weather. As a result, most vehicles—fuel-efficient gas-electric
hybrids included—will receive lower fuel economy estimates.
Among
2008 models, the Toyota Prius heads the list as “most fuel-efficient”
with a 48 miles per gallon (mpg) city and 45 mpg highway rating,
resulting in a combined 46 mpg rating overall. Honda’s Hybrid Civic is
second on the list with a combined fuel efficiency rating of 42 mpg.
The Nissan Altima Hybrid ranks third with a combined 34 mpg rating.
Toyota, Ford, Mazda and Mercury share both the fourth and fifth spots
on the list with models that achieve a combined overall fuel efficiency
rating of between 32 and 34 mpg.
Ranked
lowest in the 2008 Fuel Economy Guide are models commonly known to
offer poor gas mileage. For vehicles weighing in at less than 8,500
pounds, including models by Lamborghini, Bentley, Mercedes-Benz,
Ferrari and Jeep, fuel efficiency is rated as low as 11 mpg city and 14
mpg highway, for a combined rating of only 13 mpg overall.

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EPA Reports Highlight Fuel Economy Trends
Foreign and U.S. Model Ratings Converge
A
new report by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) highlights
a 32-year trend among major car manufacturers: foreign-based companies
such as Toyota and Honda have seen lower average fuel economy for the
cars they sell, as these companies have diversified their product
lines. Major domestic manufacturers, meanwhile, have improved their
fleet averages over the past 32 years.
Toyota
and Honda still top the list for average fleet fuel economy among major
car companies, at 29 and 28.7 miles per gallon (mpg), respectively
(down from 35.5 mpg for Honda in 1977). But the leader board varies
and the differences become less significant when companies are viewed
side-by-side by different vehicle weight classes, according to the
report, Light-Duty Automotive Technology and Fuel Economy Trends: 1975 Through 2007.
Although
GM, Ford and Chrysler improved their total fleet averages over the past
32 years, those averages are still the lowest of the major groups.
However, GM and Toyota turned in relatively equivalent average new car
fuel economy results for vehicles in, for example, the 2,750-3,000
pound weight class for much of the period—until Toyota introduced the
Prius in 2002 and strong sales improved their average in that class.
For heavier vehicles between 6,000-6,500 pounds, however, GM comes out
on top in 2007 with an expected 20.1 mpg average—the best of any
automaker.
Overall,
the unadjusted laboratory results for model year 2007 for the major
automakers by weight category show increasing convergence in average
fuel economy with the increasing size of the vehicle.
Sales Increase for Higher and Lower Fuel-Efficient Vehicles
The
same report found that U.S. sales for automobiles with relatively high
fuel economy ratings have increased as a percentage of total sales
since 2000; however, the percentage of sales for vehicles at the lower
end of the range has also increased comparably.
Sales
of vehicles rated to get from 25 to 30 miles per gallon (mpg) climbed
5.1 percentage points from 10.5 percent in 2000 to 15.6 percent in
2007. For the same period, however, sales of vehicles in the 15-20 mpg
range have also increased by 3.7 percentage points, from 38.1 percent
to 41.8 percent. This low fuel economy category continues to represent
the largest percentage of projected new vehicle sales in the United
States for 2007.
Accordingly, sales for
vehicles with fuel economy ratings in the in-between range, from 20-25
miles per gallon, dropped nine percentage points, from 43.3 percent to
34.3 percent in 2007. Since 1992, average fuel economy has been
relatively constant, ranging from 20.6 to 21.4 mpg.
U.S. average fleet fuel economy actually peaked back in 1987 at 22.1 mpg.

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Improved Agricultural Management Key to World Biodiesel Potential
A
University of Wisconsin (UW) report estimates that improvements in
tropical oilseed agriculture could multiply the potential for global
biodiesel production 12-fold. The study by UW’s Nelson Institute for
Environmental Studies evaluated production volumes and prices across
226 countries and territories and estimated current worldwide
production potential at 51 billion liters or 13.5 billion U.S. gallons
from 119 countries. That volume could meet roughly 4-5 percent of the
world’s existing demand for petroleum diesel.
Research on yields from well-managed agricultural land, however,
suggests that global biodiesel volumes could reach more than 600
billion liters per year, distributed over 106 countries, or more than
50 percent of current diesel demand. This 12-fold increase would be
spread over several crop types, but mostly attributed to tropical
oilseeds—namely palm and coconut—for which current yields are
considerably below their estimated well-managed yields.
Even under conservative estimates for increased demand in annual
vegetable oil demand for food purposes, more than 400 billion liters
could be produced on remaining agricultural land growing fuel crops.
Malaysia and Indonesia would together account for almost 75 percent of
the potential volumes from increased yields.
There is, however, serious risk of deforestation in these two countries
due to the current practice of clear-cutting to increase palm
production. Agricultural intensification associated with boosting
yields can introduce other problems including pressure on fresh water
supplies, nutrient runoff, and soil degradation. But yield increases
through improved management could also alleviate pressure to clear-cut
tropical forests.
The study cautions
that biodiesel must be developed in a responsible manner, noting that
advanced production techniques such as optimized crop selection, the
growing of dedicated energy crops such as jatropha on marginal lands,
and the eventual use of algae-based oils that do not compete for fresh
water or farmland are all important to expanding biodiesel production.
The study ranked Malaysia, Thailand, Colombia, Uruguay and Ghana as the
developing nations most likely to attract biodiesel investment, not
only because of their strong agricultural industries, but also due to
their relative safety and stability and lack of debt, among other
economic factors. Of all the vegetable oils and animal fats examined
in the study, soybean and palm oil were by far the most common. The
world’s top five soybean and palm oil producers—Malaysia, Indonesia,
Argentina, the United States and Brazil—accounted for 80 percent of the
potential global biodiesel production, the researchers found.
A copy of the University of Wisconsin report is available online at: http://www.sage.wisc.edu/energy/Biodiesel_Manuscript.pdf

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UPS Expands Investment in Cleaner, Lower-Carbon Fuel Vehicles
Having
already invested more than $15 million in alternative fuel vehicles,
UPS is expanding its fleet of delivery trucks running on compressed
natural gas (CNG) and Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG, or propane). The
company has also launched an initiative to use fuel containing 5
percent biodiesel (B5) in its ground support vehicles at its air
service hub in Louisville, Kentucky.
UPS
will be taking delivery on 167 CNG trucks and 139 LPG trucks in North
America, expanding the global alternative-fuel fleet to 1,629
vehicles—the largest such private fleet in the transportation
industry. They will join more than 800 CNG trucks already operating in
the United States and nearly 600 propane trucks already operating in
Canada and Mexico. The company’s North American fleet includes CNG,
liquefied natural gas, propane and electric and hybrid electric
vehicles. The company also is working with the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) to develop and deploy a hydraulic hybrid
delivery vehicle.
While there’s
a great deal of interest in the research we’re doing with new types of
hybrids, 70 years of testing alternative fuel vehicles has taught us
there are multiple technologies that can effectively reduce our
dependence on fossil fuels as well as our carbon footprint. Adding this
many propane and CNG vehicles is going to have a very positive impact.—Robert Hall, UPS director of vehicle engineering
CNG and LPG vehicles are estimated to provide these benefits over comparable gasoline-powered vehicles:
- Reduce carbon monoxide emissions 90-97 percent
- Reduce carbon dioxide emissions 25 percent
- Reduce nitrogen oxide emissions 35-60 percent
- Potentially reduce non-methane hydrocarbon emissions 50-75 percent
- Emit fewer toxic and carcinogenic pollutants
- Emit little or no particulate matter
- Eliminate evaporative emissions
The
biodiesel initiative in Louisville is being launched with the support
of a $515,000 federal grant that is helping offset some of the cost of
building a fuel infrastructure at the airport. The infrastructure will
provide a B5 biodiesel blend of fuel to run 366 ground support vehicles
starting early next year.

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2007 Transportation Finance Summit
December 2- 4, 2007
Washington, DC
Hosted
by the International Bridge, Tunnel, and Turnpike Association, this
summit, which will kick off with a debate on funding America’s highway
transportation system, is designed to explore congestion management,
pricing, innovative institutional funding models, indexing tolls and
fuel taxes, alternatives to the gas tax, and the technological
underpinnings of new funding models.
For more information, please visit http://www.ibtta.org/Events/content.cfm?ItemNumber=2925 or phone 202-659-4620.
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Submit Your Clean Transportation Story!
EESI’s
Transportation Program is eager to learn about your clean vehicle
fleet/efforts. If you are in the process of procurement, or if you
already operate heavy or light-duty vehicles that produce fewer
emissions and consume less fuel than conventional diesel or gasoline
powered vehicles, let us know if we haven’t heard – and told -- your
story! We’ll post this information on our website and include it in
future editions of Clean Motion!
Send this information to Jan Mueller at jmueller [at] eesi.org or call 202-662-1883. More information can be mailed to 122 C St., NW, Suite 630, Washington, DC 20001.
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monthly periodical providing an overview of current program and policy
activities related to the deployment of low-polluting, energy-efficient
transportation in the United States. Topics include technology
developments, clean vehicle deployment, energy consumption, the
environment, government policy, and public health. If there are issues
we are missing and you think we should cover, please let us know. |
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The
Environmental and Energy Study Institute is a non-profit organization
established in 1984 by a bipartisan, bicameral group of members
of Congress to provide timely information on energy and environmental
policy issues to policymakers and stakeholders and develop innovative
policy solutions that set us on a cleaner, more secure and sustainable
energy path . EESI's
valuable work in energy, climate change, agriculture, transportation
and smart growth is made possible through financial support from
people like you.
Your
tax deductible contribution will help EESI develop innovative
policy solutions for a cleaner, safer, healthier world. For more
information, go to our
website or contact Jan Mueller at jmueller [at] eesi.org or call 202-662-1883.
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