Trucking groups this
week applauded the Trump administration’s plan to reconsider truck emissions rules, which the industry had argued were unachievable on existing timelines.The American Trucking Associations, the
Truckload Carriers Association and the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers
Association were among the groups praising the Environmental Protection
Agency’s decision to reopen its greenhouse gas Phase 3 standard and review the
Nitrous Oxide (NOx) rule.“GHG3 in its current form is unachievable given
the state of battery-electric technology and the sheer lack of charging
infrastructure,” ATA President Chris Spear said in a statement. “This rule has been an albatross for the
trucking industry, threatening to reduce equipment availability, increase costs
for businesses and consumers, and cause major supply chain disruptions.”
The stricter emissions
standards, set by the Biden administration in
2022, sought to
remove harmful pollutants from truck exhaust and encourage hydrogen and
battery-powered electric vehicle adoption.The GHG3 standard would have applied
to trucks beginning in model-year 2027, and the NOx rule sought to curb those
emissions from new trucks by up to 90% by 2031.
The Biden
administration had granted waivers allowing California, which suffers from the
worst air quality in the country, to set more aggressive emissions standards
than EPA rules.
Under the second Trump administration, Spear said,
the ATA looks forward to working with the EPA on a new national rule that “will
prevent states like California from attempting to make an end run around the
administration, creating a patchwork of impossible mandates that would
jeopardize our economy.”
The TCA will continue
to push “to ensure that emissions regulations strike a balance between
environmental progress and the trucking industry’s operational
realities,” the group said an emailed statement.
OOIDA President Todd
Spencer said the Biden administration’s EPA rules threatened to regulate
small-business truckers out of existence.
“Mom and pop trucking
businesses would be suffocated by the sheer cost and operational challenges of
effectively mandating zero emission trucks,” Spencer said in an emailed
statement. “Vehicle reliability and
affordability are top priorities for OOIDA members and we have yet to see proof
that electric CMVs are a practical option for most trucking businesses
considering the price tag and lack of charging infrastructure.”