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California Air Resources Board

The California Air Resources Board (CARB or ARB) is an agency of the government of California that aims to reduce air pollution. Established in 1967 when then-governor Ronald Reagan signed the Mulford-Carrell Act, combining the Bureau of Air Sanitation and the Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Board, CARB is a department within the cabinet-level California Environmental Protection Agency.

California Air Resources Board
Logo of the California Air Resources Board
Agency overview
Formed1967
Preceding agencies
  • Bureau of Air Sanitation
  • Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Board
JurisdictionCalifornia
Headquarters1001 I Street, Sacramento, California
Employees1,365[1]
Annual budget$581.1 million[1]
Agency executive
Parent agencyCalifornia Environmental Protection Agency
Websitehttp://www.arb.ca.gov

The stated goals of CARB include attaining and maintaining healthy air quality; protecting the public from exposure to toxic air contaminants; and providing innovative approaches for complying with air pollution rules and regulations. CARB has also been instrumental in driving innovation throughout the global automotive industry through programs such as its ZEV mandate.

One of CARB's responsibilities is to define vehicle emissions standards. California is the only state permitted to issue emissions standards under the federal Clean Air Act, subject to a waiver from the United States Environmental Protection Agency. Other states may choose to follow CARB or the federal vehicle emission standards but may not set their own.[2]

Governance edit

California Air Resources Board leadership[3]
Name Affiliation Appointed Term ends
Liane M. Randolph Chair December 2020 December 31, 2026
Cliff Rechtschaffen Public Member September 2023 December 31, 2024
John R. Balmes, MD Physician December 2007 December 31, 2027
Hector De La Torre Assembly June 2018 January 1, 2025
John Eisenhut Agriculture August 2013 December 31, 2029
Nora Vargas San Diego APCD February 2022 December 31, 2024
Dean Florez Senate February 2016 December 31, 2024
Eduardo Garcia Ex Officio (Assembly) February 2017
Davina Hurt Bay Area AQMD December 2020 December 31, 2026
Gideon Kracov South Coast AQMD December 2020 December 31, 2026
Henry Stern Ex Officio (Senate) January 2023
Tania Pacheco-Werner, PhD San Joaquin Valley APCD December 2020 December 31, 2026
Eric Guerra Sacramento Region Air Districts Member January 2023 December 31, 2028
Susan Shaheen Automotive Member January 2023 December 31, 2028
V. Manuel Perez Air District Member January 2023 December 31, 2028
Diane Tavorkian Public August 31, 2018 December 31, 2029

CARB's governing board is made up of 16 members, with 2 non-voting members appointed for legislative oversight, one each by the California State Assembly and Senate. 12 of the 14 voting members are appointed by the governor and subject to confirmation by the Senate: five from local air districts, four air pollution subject-matter experts, two members of the public, and the Chair. The other two voting members are appointed from environmental justice committees by the Assembly and Senate.[3]

Five of the governor-appointed board members are chosen from regional air pollution control or air quality management districts, including one each from:[3]

 
Researchers at the Statewide Air Pollution Research Center manufacture smog using a photochemical tube reactor (May 1972).

Four governor-appointed board members are subject matter experts in specific fields: automotive engineering, currently Dan Sperling; science, agriculture, or law, currently John Eisenhut; medicine, currently John R. Balmes, M.D.; and air pollution control. The governor is also responsible for two appointees from members of the public, and the final governor appointee is the Board's Chair. The first Chair of CARB was Dr. Arie Jan Haagen-Smit, who was previously a professor at the California Institute of Technology and started research into air pollution in 1948. Dr. Haagen-Smit is credited with discovering the source of smog in California, which led to the development of air pollution controls and standards.[4] In honor of his legacy, CARB started the Haagen-Smit Clean Air Awards program in 2001 to recognize individuals who have had significant accomplishments in the field of air quality and climate change.[5]

The two legislature-appointed board members work directly with communities affected by air pollution. They are currently Diane Takvorian and Dean Florez, appointed by the Assembly and Senate respectively.

Organizational structure edit

CARB is a part of the California Environmental Protection Agency, an organization which reports directly to the Governor's Office in the Executive Branch of California State Government.[6]

CARB has 15 divisions and offices:[7]

  • Office of the Chair
  • Executive Office
  • Office of Community Air Protection
  • Air Quality Planning and Science Division
  • Emission Certification and Compliance Division
  • Enforcement Division
  • Industrial Strategies Division
  • Mobile Source Control Division
  • Mobile Source Laboratory Division
  • Research Division
  • Sustainable Transportation and Communities Division
  • Transportation and Toxics Division
  • Office of Information Services
  • Administrative Services Division

Air Quality Planning and Science Division edit

 
California Air Resources Board Laboratory, Los Angeles, in 1973

The division assesses the extent of California's air quality problems and the progress being made to abate them, coordinates statewide development of clean air plans and maintains databases pertinent to air quality and emissions. The division's technical support work provides a basis for clean air plans and CARB's regulatory programs. This support includes management and interpretation of emission inventories, air quality data, meteorological data and of air quality modeling.[8][9]

The Air Quality Planning and Science Division has five branches:[9]

Atmospheric Modeling & Support Section edit

The Atmospheric Modeling & Support Section is one of three sections within the Modeling & Meteorology Branch. The other two sections are the Regional Air Quality Modeling Section and the Meteorology Section.[8]

The air quality and atmospheric pollution dispersion models[10][11] routinely used by this Section include a number of the models recommended by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). The section uses models which were either developed by CARB or whose development was funded by CARB, such as:

  • CALPUFF – Originally developed by the Sigma Research Company (SRC) under contract to CARB. Currently maintained by the TRC Solution Company under contract to the U.S. EPA.
  • CALGRID – Developed by CARB and currently maintained by CARB.[12]
  • SARMAP – Developed by CARB and currently maintained by CARB.[13]

Role in reducing greenhouse gases edit

The California Air Resources Board is charged with implementing California's comprehensive suite of policies to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases. In part due to the efforts of CARB, California has successfully decoupled greenhouse gas emissions from economic growth, and achieved its goal of reducing emissions to 1990 levels four years earlier than the target date of 2020.[14]

Alternative Fuel Vehicle Incentive Program edit

Alternative Fuel Vehicle Incentive Program (also known as Fueling Alternatives) is funded by the California Air Resources Board (CARB), offered throughout the State of California and administered by the California Center for Sustainable Energy (CCSE).[15]

Low-Emission Vehicle Program edit

 
Smog in San Gabriel, May 1972

The CARB first adopted the Low-Emission Vehicle (LEV) Program standards in 1990 to address smog-forming pollutants,[16][17] which covered automobiles sold in California from 1994 through 2003. An amendment to the LEV Program, known as LEV II, was adopted in 1999, and covered vehicles for the 2004 through 2014 model years.[18] Greenhouse gas (GHG) emission regulations were adopted in 2004 starting for the 2009 model year, and are named the "Pavley" standards after Assemblymember Fran Pavley, who had written Assembly Bill 1493 in 2002 to establish them.[19][20] A second amendment, LEV III, was adopted in 2012, and covers vehicles sold from 2015 onward for both smog (superseding LEV II) and GHG (superseding Pavley) emissions.[21][22] The rules created under the LEV Program have been codified as specific sections in Title 13 of the California Code of Regulations;[23] in general, LEV I is § 1960.1; LEV II is § 1961; Pavley is § 1961.1; LEV III is § 1961.2 (smog-forming pollutants) and 1961.3 (GHG). The ZEV regulations, which were initially part of LEV I, have been broken out separately into § 1962.[24]

For comparison, the average new car sold in 1965 would produce approximately 2,000 lb (910 kg) of hydrocarbons over 100,000 mi (160,000 km) of driving; under the LEV I standards, the average new car sold in 1998 was projected to produce hydrocarbon emissions of 50 lb (23 kg) over the same distance, and under LEV II, the average new car in 2010 would further reduce hydrocarbon emissions to 10 lb (4.5 kg).[25]

Required labeling edit

Global Warming & Smog Scores
Global
Warming
Score
CO
2

(g/mi)
Smog
Score
MY (2009)2013–2017[a][26] MY 2018+[b][27]
CA
LEV II
EPA
Tier 2
NMOG+NO
x

(g/mi)
CA
LEV III
EPA
Tier 3
NMOG+NO
x

(g/mi)
10 <200 10 ZEV Bin 1 0.000 ZEV Bin 0 0.000
9 200–239 9 AT PZEV, PZEV 0.030
8 240–279 8 SULEV Bin 2 0.030 SULEV20 Bin 20 0.020
7 280–319 7 Bin 3 0.085 SULEV30 Bin 30 0.030
6 320–359 6 Bin 4 0.110 ULEV50 Bin 50 0.050
5 360–399 5 ULEV 0.125 ULEV70 Bin 70 0.070
4 400–439 4 LEV Bin 5 0.160
3 440–479 3 Bin 6 0.190 – 0.200 ULEV125 Bin 125 0.125
2 480–519 2 Bin 7 0.240
1 ≥520 1 [c] Bin 8a 0.325 LEV160 Bin 160 0.160
Notes
  1. ^ Based on the scoring for the "Environmental Performance Label", applied to new vehicles model years 2009–2012 in California. The California label was aligned with Federal standards in 2013.
  2. ^ Scoring realigned with LEV III/Tier 3 scores starting in model year 2018. Note the change in standards; for example, a LEV under LEV II (160 mg/mi) which was rated with a smog score of 4 under the old label would now be rated with as LEV160 under LEV III and would receive a smog score of 1.
  3. ^ ULEV under California LEV I standard.

In 2005, the California State Assembly passed AB 1229, which required all new vehicles manufactured after January 1, 2009 to bear an Environmental Performance Label, which scored the emissions performance of the vehicle on two scales ranging between 1 (worst) and 10 (best): one for global warming (emissions of GHG such as N
2
O
, CH
4
, air conditioning refrigerants, and CO
2
) and one for smog-forming compounds (non-methane organic gases (NMOG), NO
x
, and HC).[26][28] The Federal Government followed suit and required a similar "smog score" on new vehicles sold starting in 2013; the standards were realigned for labels applied to 2018 model year vehicles.

Vehicle categories edit

The LEV program has established several categories of reduced emissions vehicles. LEV I defined LEV and ULEV vehicles, and added TLEV and Tier 1 temporary classifications that would not be sold after 2003. LEV II added SULEV and PZEV vehicles, and LEV III tightened emission standards. The actual emission levels depend on the standards in use.

LEV I defined emission limits for several different classes of vehicle, including passenger cars (PC), light-duty trucks (LDT), and medium-duty vehicles (MDV). Heavy-duty vehicles were specifically excluded from LEV I. LEV I also defined a loaded vehicle weight (LVW) as the vehicle's Curb weight plus an allowance of 300 lb (140 kg). In general, the most stringent standards were applied to passenger cars and light-duty trucks with a LVW up to 3,750 lb (1,700 kg) (these "light" LDTs were later denoted LDT1 under LEV II).[17] LEV II increased the scope of vehicles classed as light-duty trucks to encompass a higher GVWR up to 8,500 lb (3,900 kg), compared to the LEV I standard of 6,000 lb (2,700 kg). In addition, LEV I had defined less stringent limits for heavier LDTs (denoted LDT2 with a LVW 3,751–5,750 lb (1,701–2,608 kg)); LEV II closed that discrepancy and defined a single emissions standard for all PCs and LDTs.[18] Under LEV III, medium-duty passenger vehicles (MDPV) were brought under the most stringent standards alongside PCs and LDTs.[21]

Vehicle classes under the LEV regulations[17][18][21]
Class Abbr. GVWR Notes
Passenger car PC Designed primarily for transportation of persons with a design capacity of ≤12 people.
Light-duty truck LDT ≤6,000 lb
2,700 kg[a]
Designed primarily for transportation of property, derivatives of those, or available with special features for off-street use. LDT1 was defined as those with LVW up to 3,750 lb (1,700 kg), and LDT2 was defined as those with LVW from 3,751 to 5,750 lb (1,701 to 2,608 kg).
≤8,500 lb
3,900 kg[b]
Medium-duty vehicle MDV ≤8,500 lb
3,900 kg[c]
Any non-passenger vehicle with a GVWR >6,000 lb (2,700 kg) and less than the limits shown here.
≤14,000 lb
6,400 kg[d]
Notes
  1. ^ For model years before 2000
  2. ^ For model years 2000 and subsequent
  3. ^ For model years before 1995
  4. ^ For model years 1995 and subsequent, or model years 1992 and subsequent LEV, ULEV, SULEV, or ZEV.

Smog-forming compound emissions limits edit

Rather than providing a single standard for vehicles based on age, purpose, and weight, the LEV I standards introduced different tiers of limits for smog-forming compound emissions starting in the 1995 model year. After 2003, LEV was the minimum standard to be met.[17]

California Emissions Standards[a][b][c][29]
Category NMOG[d]+NO
x
[e]
CO PM[f] HCHO
LEV I[g][17] LEV II[h][18] LEV III[i][21] LEV I[g] LEV II[h] LEV III[i] LEV I[g] LEV II[h] LEV III[i] LEV I[g] LEV II[h] LEV III[i]
Tier 1[j] 0.91[k][l][m] 4.2[n] [o]
TLEV[j] 0.756[p] 4.2 0.08 0.018
LEV LEV160 0.390[q] 0.160[r] 0.160 4.2 4.2 4.2 0.08 0.01 0.01 0.018 0.018 0.004
ULEV ULEV125 0.355[s] 0.125[t] 0.125 2.1 2.1 2.1 0.04 0.01 0.01 0.011 0.011 0.004
ULEV70 0.070 1.7
ULEV50 0.050
SULEV[u] SULEV30 0.030[v] 0.030 1.0 1.0 0.01 0.01 0.004 0.004
SULEV20 0.020
Notes
  1. ^ Values are in grams per mile for all passenger cars and those light-duty trucks with a loaded vehicle weight (total of kerb weight plus 300 lb (140 kg) driver) less than 3,750 lb (1,700 kg), tested under the FTP-75 protocol.
  2. ^ Under LEV II and LEV III, the definition of light duty trucks was expanded to encompass all vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of 8,500 lb (3,900 kg) or less.
  3. ^ Under LEV III, this category also now includes all medium-duty passenger vehicles with a GVWR of 10,000 lb (4,500 kg) or less.
  4. ^ Non-methane organic gases
  5. ^ NMOG and NO
    x
    were reported separately under LEV I and LEV II
  6. ^ Particulate Matter
  7. ^ a b c d LEV I standards are given for emissions at the 100,000 mi (160,000 km) / 10 year age
  8. ^ a b c d LEV II standards are given for emissions at the 120,000 mi (190,000 km) / 11 year age
  9. ^ a b c d LEV III standards are given for emissions at the 150,000 mi (240,000 km) age
  10. ^ a b Tier 1 and transitional LEV (TLEV) vehicles were not sold after 2003.
  11. ^ LEV I: 0.31 g/mi NMOG + 0.6 g/mi NO
    x
    .
  12. ^ LEV I: 0.31 g/mi NMOG + 1.0 g/mi NO
    x
    for diesel-powered vehicles.
  13. ^ For comparison, the values for 1988–94 model year passenger cars, light-duty trucks, and medium-duty trucks (<3,750 LVW) were 0.39–0.46 g/mi NMOG and 0.4-1.0 g/mi NO
    x
    .
  14. ^ For comparison, the values for 1988–94 model year passenger cars were 7.0-8.3 g/mi CO, and for light-duty trucks and medium-duty trucks (<3,750 LVW), 9.0-10.6 g/mi CO.
  15. ^ Formaldehyde standards provided for 1993 and newer model year vehicles fueled by methanol and ethanol: for passenger cars, light-duty trucks and medium-duty trucks (<3,750 LVW), 0.023 g/mi HCHO for 1993–95 and 0.015 g/mi HCHO for 1996+
  16. ^ LEV I: 0.156 g/mi NMOG + 0.6 g/mi NO
    x
  17. ^ LEV I: 0.090 g/mi NMOG + 0.3 g/mi NO
    x
  18. ^ LEV II: 0.090 g/mi NMOG + 0.07 g/mi NO
    x
  19. ^ LEV I: 0.055 g/mi NMOG + 0.3 g/mi NO
    x
  20. ^ LEV II: 0.055 g/mi NMOG + 0.07 g/mi NO
    x
  21. ^ SULEV for passenger cars and light-duty trucks was not defined until LEV II.
  22. ^ LEV II: 0.010 g/mi NMOG + 0.02 g/mi NO
    x

Greenhouse gas emissions limits edit

 
Sunlight filtered through smog near Blythe, May 1972

CARB adopted regulations for limits on greenhouse gas emissions in 2004 starting with the 2009 model year to support the direction provided by AB 1493.[19] In June 2005, Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed Executive Order S-03-05, which required a reduction in California GHG emissions, targeting an 80% reduction compared to 1990 levels by 2050.[30] Assembly Bill 32, better known as the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, codified these requirements.[31]

CARB filed a waiver request with the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under Section 209(b) of the Clean Air Act in December 2005 to permit it to establish limits on greenhouse gas emissions; although the waiver request was initially denied in March 2008, it was later approved on June 30, 2009 after President Barack Obama signed a Presidential Memorandum directing the EPA to reconsider the waiver.[19][32] In the initial denial, EPA Administrator Stephen L. Johnson stated the Clean Air Act was not "intended to allow California to promulgate state standards for emissions from new motor vehicles designed to address global climate change problems" and further, that he did not believe "the effects of climate change in California are compelling and extraordinary compared to the effects in the rest of the country."[33] Johnson's successor, Lisa P. Jackson, signed the waiver overturning Johnson's denial, writing that "EPA must grant California a waiver if California determines that its standards are, in the aggregate, at least as protective of the public health and welfare as applicable Federal standards." Jackson also noted that in the history of the waiver process, over 50 waivers had been granted and only one had been fully denied, namely the March 2008 denial of the GHG emissions regulation.[34]

Greenhouse gas fleet average emissions targets[35]
Model
Year
(g/mi CO
2
-equivalent)
PCs & LDT1s LDT2s & MDPVs
2009 323 439
2010 301 420
2011 267 390
2012 233 361
2013 227 355
2014 222 350
2015 213 341
2016+ 205 332

CARB decided to adopt regulation of GHG emissions under Executive Order G-05-061, which provided phase-in targets for fleet average GHG emissions in CO
2
-equivalent grams per mile starting with the 2009 model year.[35] The calculation of CO
2
-equivalent emissions was based on contributions from four different chemicals: CO
2
, N
2
O
, CH
4
, and air conditioning refrigerants.

The emissions in g/mi CO
2
-equivalent are calculated according to the formula  , which has two terms for direct and indirect emissions allowances of air conditioning refrigerants, depending on the refrigerant used, such as HFC134a, and the system design. Vehicles powered by alternative fuels use a slightly modified formula,  , where   is a fuel adjustment factor depending on the alternative fuel used (1.03 for natural gas, 0.89 for LPG, and 0.74 for E85). ZEVs are also required to calculate GHG as the processes to generate the energy (or fuel) used also produce GHG. For ZEVs,  , where   is the upstream emissions factor (130 g/mi for battery electric vehicles, 210 for hydrogen/fuel cell, and 290 for hydrogen/internal combustion).[35] Direct CO
2
emissions could be calculated in a relatively straightforward fashion based on fuel consumption.[36] Manufacturers that do not wish to measure N
2
O
emissions may assume a value of 0.006 g/mi.[35] An update was issued in 2010 which allowed manufacturers to calculate GHG emissions using CAFE data; for conventionally powered vehicles, the contribution from the nitrous oxide and methane terms could be assumed to be 1.9 g/mi.[37]

CARB voted unanimously in March 2017 to require automakers to average 54.5 miles per US gallon (4.32 L/100 km; 65.5 mpg‑imp) for new cars in 2025.[38]

Section 177 states edit

 
Section 177 states:
 •   blue=LEV only
 •   green=LEV+ZEV
 •   red=LEV repealed
"California emissions" states[39][40][41]
State LEV ZEV MY
CA Yes Yes 2005
CO Yes Yes 2022
CT Yes Yes 2008
DC Yes No 2012
DE Yes No 2014
MA Yes Yes 2009
MD Yes Yes 2011
ME Yes Yes 2009
MN Yes Yes 2025 (anticipated)
NJ Yes Yes 2009
NM Yes Yes 2026
NV Yes Yes 2025
NY Yes Yes 2009
OR Yes Yes 2009
PA Yes No 2008
RI Yes Yes 2009
VA Yes Yes 2025
VT Yes Yes 2009
WA Yes Yes 2009 (ZEV: 2025)

Because California had emissions regulations prior to the 1977 Clean Air Act, under Section 177 of that bill,[42] other states may adopt the more stringent California emissions regulations as an alternative to federal standards. Thirteen other states and the District of Columbia have chosen to do so, and ten of those have additionally adopted the California Zero-Emission Vehicle regulations.[39][40][43] In December 2020, Minnesota announced its intention to adopt California LEV and ZEV rules;[44] following a hearing before an administrative law judge in February 2021, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency adopted the California regulations.[45][46] In August 2022, Virginia, citing to a 2021 law, announced it would follow California regulations for ZEV registrations.[47]

Arizona and New Mexico had previously adopted California LEV regulations under Section 177, but later repealed those states' clean car standards in 2012[48] and 2013,[49] respectively.[50]

In Canada, the province of Quebec adopted CARB standards effective in 2010.[51] CARB and the Government of Canada entered into a Memorandum of Understanding in June 2019 to cooperate on greenhouse gas emissions mitigation.[52]

Zero-Emission Vehicle Program edit

The CARB Zero-Emission Vehicle (ZEV) program was enacted by the California government starting in 1990 to promote the use of zero emission vehicles.[53] The program goal is to reduce the pervasive air pollution affecting the main metropolitan areas in the state, particularly in Los Angeles, where prolonged pollution episodes are frequent. The California ZEV rule was first adopted by CARB as part of the 1990 Low-Emission Vehicle (LEV I) Program.[16] The focus of the 1990 rules (ZEV-90) was to meet air quality standards for ozone rather than the reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.[54]: 5 

Under LEV II in 1999, the ZEV regulations were moved to a separate section (13 CCR § 1962) and the requirements for ZEVs as a percentage of fleet sales was made more formal. Executive Order S-03-05 (2005) and Assembly Bills 1493 (2002) and 32 (2006) prompted CARB to reevaluate the ZEV program as last amended in 1996, which had been primarily concerned with reducing emissions of smog-forming pollutants.[54] By the time AB 32 passed in 2006, vehicles complying with PZEV and AT PZEV standards had become commercially successful, and the ZEV program could then shift towards reducing both smog-forming compounds and greenhouse gases.[54]

The next set of ZEV regulations were adopted in 2012 with LEV III. CARB put both LEV and ZEV rules together as the Advanced Clean Cars Program (ACC), adopted in 2012, which included regulations for cars sold through the 2025 model year. The regulations include updates to regulations for LEV III (for smog-forming emissions), LEV III GHG (for greenhouse gas emissions), and ZEV.[55][56][57] Since then, in September 2020 Governor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order directing that by 2035, all new cars and passenger trucks sold in California will be zero-emission vehicles.[58] Executive Order N-79-20 directs CARB to develop regulations to require that ZEVs be an increasing share of new vehicles sold in the state, with light-duty cars and trucks and off-road vehicles and equipment meeting the 100% ZEV goal by 2035 and medium and heavy-duty trucks and buses meeting the same 100% ZEV goal by 2045. The order also directs Caltrans to develop near-term actions to encourage "an integrated, statewide rail and transit network" and infrastructure to support bicycles and pedestrians.[59] In response, CARB began development of the Advanced Clean Cars II (ACC II) Program, focusing on emissions of vehicles sold after 2025. ACC II is scheduled for consideration before CARB in June 2022.[60]

Vehicle definitions edit

LEV I defined a ZEV as one that produces "zero emissions of any criteria pollutants under any and all possible operational modes and conditions." A vehicle could still qualify as a ZEV with a fuel-fired heater, as long as the heater was unable to be operated at ambient temperatures above 40 °F (4 °C) and did not have any evaporative emissions.[17]: 2–6, 2–7  Under LEV II (ZEV-99), the ZEV definition was updated to include precursor pollutants, but did not consider upstream emissions from power plants.[61]: C-1 

The ZEV regulation has evolved and been modified several times since 1990, and several new partial or low-emission categories were created and defined,[62][63][64][65] including the introduction of PZEV and AT PZEV categories in ZEV-99.[61]: B-1, B-2 

  • PZEV (Partial Zero Emission Vehicle): Meets SULEV tailpipe standards, has a 15-year / 150,000 mile warranty, and zero evaporative emissions. These vehicles are 80% cleaner than the average 2002 model year car.
  • AT PZEV (Advanced Technology PZEV): These are advanced technology vehicles that meet PZEV standards and include ZEV enabling technology, typically hybrid electric vehicles (HEV). They are 80% cleaner than the average 2002 model year car.
  • ZEV (Zero Emission Vehicle): Zero tailpipe emissions, and 98% cleaner than the average new 2003 model year vehicle.

Manufacturer sales volume edit

Under ZEV-90, CARB classified manufacturers according to the average sales per year between 1989 and 1993; small volume manufacturers were those that sold 3,000 or fewer new vehicles per year; intermediate volume manufacturers sold between 3,001 and 35,000; and large volume manufacturers sold more than 35,000 per year.[17]: 2–3  For large volume manufacturers, CARB required that 2% of 1998 to 2000 model year vehicles sold were ZEVs, ramping up to 5% ZEVs by 2001 and 10% ZEVs in 2003 and beyond. Intermediate volume manufacturers were not required to meet the goals until 2003, and small volume manufacturers were exempted. These percentages were calculated based on total production of passenger cars and light-duty trucks with a loaded vehicle weight (LVW) less than 3,750 lb (1,700 kg).[17]: 3-22 to 3-24 [66]

ZEV credit system edit

ZEV-96 Credits[67]
Model
Year
2 ZEV Count 3 ZEV Count
Range
(mi)
Specific Energy
(Wh/kg)
Range
(mi)
Specific Energy
(Wh/kg)
1996–97 any any ≥70 ≥40
1998 ≥100 ≥130
1999 ≥50 ≥60
2000 ≥140 ≥175
2001–02 ≥60 ≥90

The LEV I rules also introduced the concept of emission credits. Under LEV I, the vehicle fleet average emissions rate of non-methane organic gases (NMOG) produced by a manufacturer was required to meet increasingly stringent requirements starting in 1994.[17]: 3–18  The calculation of fleet average NMOG emissions was based on a weighted sum of vehicle NMOG emissions, based on the number sold and type of certification (i.e., TLEV, LEV, ULEV, etc.), divided by the total number of vehicles produced, including ZEVs.[17]: 3–20  Manufacturers whose fleet average NMOG emissions met or exceeded the NMOG emissions goal would be subjected to civil penalties; those which fell below the goal would receive credits, which could then be marketed to other manufacturers.[17]: 3–24 

The 1996 amendments to the ZEV regulations in LEV I (ZEV-96) introduced credits where a ZEV could be counted more than once based on vehicle range or battery specific energy to encourage deployment of ZEVs prior to 2003.[67]: 3–4 

Under LEV II/ZEV-99, the PZEV and AT PZEV categories were introduced, and the percentage of ZEVs sold by a manufacturer could be partially met by the sales of PZEV and AT PZEVs.[61]: C-2  If a vehicle met PZEV criteria, it qualified for a credit equal to 0.2 of one ZEV for the purposes of calculating that manufacturer's ZEV production.[61]: C-6  AT PZEVs capable of traveling with zero emissions for a limited range were allowed additional credit if the urban all-electric range was at least ten miles.[61]: C-7  ZEVs that were introduced prior to 2003 received a multiplier, with a value ranging up to 10× a single ZEV depending on the all-electric range and fast-charging capability.[61]: C-11, C-12 

MOA demonstration fleet edit

MOA EVs (1997+)[68]
Mfr Model Date Battery Range Qty
(12/97)
Chrysler EPIC ?/97 SLA 60 mi
97 km
17
Ford Ranger EV ?/97 SLA 60 mi
97 km
10
GM EV1 12/96 SLA 75 mi
121 km
265
GM S-10 EV ?/97 SLA 40 mi
64 km
354
NiMH 80 mi
130 km
7
Honda EV Plus 05/97 NiMH 125 mi
201 km
104
Nissan Altra ?/98 Li-ion 120 mi
190 km
Toyota RAV4 EV 10/97 NiMH 125 mi
201 km
69

In March 1996, ZEV-96 eliminated the ZEV ramp-up planned to start in 1998, but the goal of 10% ZEVs by 2003 was retained, with credits granted for sales of partial ZEVs (PZEVs).[67][62] According to comment responses, CARB determined that advanced batteries would not be ready in time to meet the ZEV requirements until at least 2003.[69]: 6–7 

 
GM EV1

In conjunction with relaxing the requirements in ZEV-96, CARB signed memoranda of agreement (MOAs) with the seven large scale manufacturers to begin rolling out demonstration fleets of ZEVs with limited public availability in the near term. The GM EV1 was the first battery electric vehicle (BEV) offered to the public, in partial fulfillment of the agreement with CARB. The EV1 was available only through a US$399 (equivalent to $740 in 2022)/month lease starting in December 1996; the initial markets were South Coast, San Diego, and Arizona, and expanded to Sacramento and the Bay Area. GM also offered an electric S-10 pickup truck to fleet operators.[68]

In 1997, Honda (EV Plus, May 1997), Toyota (RAV4 EV, October 1997), and Chrysler (EPIC, 1997) followed suit. Ford also introduced the Ranger EV for the 1998 model year, and Nissan stated they planned to offer the Altra in the 1998 model year as well to fulfill the MOA. As an acceptable alternative, Mazda stated they would purchase ZEV credits from Ford.[68]: 7–10 

Advanced Clean Cars edit

The Low-Emission Vehicle Program was revised to define modified ZEV regulations for 2015 models.[62][70][71] CARB estimates that ACC will result in 10% of all sales to be ZEVs by 2025.[72]: 5  The share remained at 3% between 2014 and 2016. Battery vehicles receive 3 or 4 credits, while fuel cell cars receive 9. As of 2016, a credit has a market value of $3-4,000, and some automakers have more credits than required.[73][74]

CARB held a public workshop in September 2020 where several new consumer-friendly regulations for ZEVs were proposed to improve adoption:[75]

  • Standardization of a DC Fast Charge inlet (proposing to use CCS Combo 1, with adapters provided by the vehicle manufacturer if applicable)
  • Standardization of vehicle and battery data (to assist assessment of need for repairs/condition)
  • Implement a standardized battery state-of-health (SOH) indicator (using SAE J1634 dynamometer testing to define battery capacity) and define a value of battery SOH that qualifies for warranty repair
  • Make ZEV powertrain service and repair information available to independent technicians and repair shops (including standardization of communication protocols for vehicle data)

In May 2021, additional draft requirements were added:[76]

  • Durability: BEVs to maintain 80% of certified range for 15 years/150,000 miles
  • Durability: FCEVs to maintain 90% of fuel cell system output power after 4,000 hours of operation
  • Battery Labelling: standardized content to improve the efficiency of recycling batteries to recover materials or potential repurposing

To improve access to ZEVs, CARB added proposed environmental justice (EJ) credits in August 2021 for manufacturers who improve options for clean transportation to underserved communities, such as by providing a discount on a ZEV that would be used in a community-based clean mobility program. The August workshop also included additional regulations for ZEVs:[77]

  • Range: starting in 2026, minimum (2-cycle) range to be 200 mi (320 km)
  • On-board charger: minimum 5.76 kW for AC (Level 2) charging, sufficient for a BEV to charge overnight (8 hours) from a 30A source
Stringency proposal
  Proposed regulatory requirement
  Minimum vehicle stringency (with EJ credits)

The final workshop in October 2021 proposed that ZEVs would be taken out of fleet calculations for vehicle emissions and provided yearly targets for ZEV vehicle sales as a percent of total sales, including potential EJ credits. Additionally, the required warranty period and requirements to take credit for PHEV sales were defined:[78]

  • Battery to retain ≥ 80% SoH for 8 years/100,000 miles
  • PHEVs to meet one of two requirements:
    • Transitional PHEVs (2026–28): minimum 30 mi (48 km) all-electric range with additional credit if vehicle exceeds 10 mi (16 km) on the US06 high speed/acceleration cycle; 8 year/100,000 80%SOH battery warranty, 5.76 kW on-board charger
    • Full credit PHEVs (2026+): minimum 50 mi (80 km) all-electric range, minimum 40 mi (64 km) on the US06 high speed/acceleration cycle; 8 year/100,000 80%SOH battery warranty, 5.76 kW on-board charger
  • "Small volume" manufacturers (defined as those selling fewer than 4,500 cars per year) are required to comply with the ZEV mandate starting with the 2035 model year

Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project edit

California Hybrid and Zero-Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project (HVIP for short) offers up-front discounts on medium and heavy duty electric trucks. Additionally, discounts will be increased for public transit agencies, school buses for public school districts, and vehicles operating in disadvantaged communities. For example, a public school district could receive up to $198,000 off the price of a new electric bus; a public transit agency could receive $69,000 off the price of a new Class 4 electric shuttle.[79] Launched by the California Air Resources Board in 2009, the project is part of California Climate Investments.[80]

OHV Emission Standards edit

The California DMV implements the policy dictates of the California Air Resources Board (CARB) with respect to registration of off-highway motor vehicles (OHVs).[81] Registration consists of ID plates or placards issued by the DMV.[82] Operating a motorized vehicle off-highway in California requires either a Green Sticker or a Red Sticker ID. The Green Sticker indicates that the vehicle has passed emission requirements. The Red Sticker (issued through 2021) restricts OHV use due to not meeting emission standards established by the CARB. The red sticker program began in 1994 when CARB adopted standards for emissions from two-stroke engines used primarily on dirt bikes. Between 1998 and 2003 the red sticker program was refined allowing vehicles that did not meet peak ozone season standards to be operated only at specific times of the year. [83] As of model year 2022 the CARB no longer authorizes issuing of red stickers. [84]

Commercial Harbor Craft Regulation edit

The California Air Resources Board's (CARB) Commercial Harbor Craft regulation is a regulatory framework aimed at reducing emissions from commercial vessels operating in California's harbors and ports. The rule primarily targets diesel-powered vessels such as ferries, tugboats, and other workboats that operate in and around California's ports.[85][86] Since the original adoption of regulation in 2008, and its amendments in 2010 and 2022, vessel owners in the state have been required to either replace their engines or send their boats out of the state.[87][88]

Low-carbon fuel standard edit

The Low-Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS) requires oil refineries and distributors to ensure that the mix of fuel they sell in the Californian market meets the established declining targets for greenhouse gas emissions measured in CO2-equivalent grams per unit of fuel energy sold for transport purposes. The 2007 Governor's LCFS directive calls for a reduction of at least 10% in the carbon intensity of California's transportation fuels by 2020. These reductions include not only tailpipe emissions but also all other associated emissions from production, distribution and use of transport fuels within the state. Therefore, California LCFS considers the fuel's full life cycle, also known as the "well to wheels" or "seed to wheels" efficiency of transport fuels.[16][89] The standard is aimed to reduce the state’s dependence on petroleum, create a market for clean transportation technology, and stimulate the production and use of alternative, low-carbon fuels in California.[90]

On April 23, 2009, CARB approved the specific rules for the LCFS that will go into effect in January 2011.[91][92] The rule proposal prepared by its technical staff was approved by a 9-1 vote, to set the 2020 maximum carbon intensity reference value to 86 grams of carbon dioxide released per megajoule of energy produced.[90][93]

PHEV Research Center edit

The PHEV Research Center was launched with funding from the California Air Resources Board.

Innovative Clean Transit edit

Under the Innovative Clean Transit (formerly known as the Advanced Clean Transit) regulation adopted in December 2018, public transportation agencies in California will gradually transition to a zero-emission bus fleet by 2040.[94] Large transit agencies (defined as those operating more than 65 buses in the San Joaquin Valley Air Basin or South Coast Air Quality Management District, or those operating more than 100 buses elsewhere with populations greater than 200,000) are required to have 25% of new bus purchases as zero-emission buses (ZEBs) starting in 2023, 50% of new purchases as ZEBs starting in 2026, and 100% of new purchases as ZEBs starting in 2029. Small transit agencies are required to make 25% of new purchases as ZEBs in 2026 and 100% of new purchases as ZEBs in 2029+. Per the regulation, ZEBs are defined to include battery electric buses and fuel cell buses, but do not include electric trolleybuses which draw power from overhead lines.[95] The Antelope Valley Transit Authority has set a goal to be the first all-electric fleet by the end of 2018, ahead of the tightened regulations.[96]

Regulation of ozone produced by air cleaners and ionizers edit

The California Air Resources Board has a page listing air cleaners (many with ionizers) meeting their indoor ozone limit of 0.050 parts per million.[97] From that article:

All portable indoor air cleaning devices sold in California must be certified by the California Air Resources Board (CARB). To be certified, air cleaners must be tested for electrical safety and ozone emissions, and meet an ozone emission concentration limit of 0.050 parts per million. For more information about the regulation, visit the air cleaner regulation.

Southern California headquarters, Mary D. Nichols Campus edit

 
California Air Resources Board's Southern California headquarters in Riverside, CA

On October 27, 2017 CARB broke ground on its new state-of-the-art Southern California headquarters. CARB chose the site near the University of California, Riverside, in March 2016 and completed environmental studies in June 2017. Construction costs of $419 million, which include $108 million for specialized laboratory and testing equipment, were approved by the Legislature in July. Of those costs, $154 million comes from fines paid by Volkswagen for air quality violations related to the diesel car cheating case. Additional funds will come from the Motor Vehicle Account, the Air Pollution Control Fund and the Vehicle Inspection Repair Fund.[98]

Over a decade of planning has gone into the development of a replacement for CARB’s aging Haagen-Smit Laboratory. Opened in 1973 in El Monte, California, the Haagen-Smit Laboratory is the site of many of CARB’s groundbreaking efforts to reduce the emissions of cars and trucks, as well as efforts to introduce zero-emission and plug-in vehicles to California. In 2015, engineers and technicians based at the Haagen-Smit Laboratory were instrumental in discovering the infamous VW diesel “defeat device,” leading to the largest emissions control violation settlement in national and California history.

The new campus features an extended range of dedicated test cells, including heavy-duty testing. There is also workspace for accommodating new test methods for future generations of vehicles, and space for developing enhanced on-board diagnostics and portable emissions measurement systems. The facility also includes a separate advanced chemistry laboratory. The Southern California Headquarters’ office and administration space accommodates 460 employees and includes visitor reception and public areas, a press room, flexible conference and workshop space, and a 250-person public auditorium.

Sustainability drove the striking architecture and every detail of the campus. Designed by ZGF Architects and built by Hensel Phelps, the new headquarters is built for the future. At 402,000 square feet, it is designed to be the largest Zero Net Energy building in the United States, aided by solar arrays throughout the campus that generate 3.5 Megawatts of electricity, and a chilled beam temperature management system that provides increased energy efficiency and occupant comfort. As a result, the facility achieves Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Platinum certification, and California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen) Tier 2 standards and is designed to achieve Zero-Net Energy performance .

On November 18, 2021, CARB dedicated the new Southern California headquarters in honor of former Chair Mary D. Nichols whose career at CARB spanned four decades under three different California governors.[99]

See also edit

California Air Resources Board
Other

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website
  • Title 13 Motor Vehicles, Division 3 regulations in the California Code of Regulations (CCR) from Westlaw
  • Title 17 Public Health, Division 3 regulations in the CCR from Westlaw
  • CARB's Low-Emission Vehicle Regulations and Test Procedures
  • CARB web site page on Climate Change
  • CARB's Diesel Emission Control Strategies Verification
News
  • California charts course to fight global warming: California's greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent over the next 12 years.
  • California air board announces plan for carbon-credit trading.

california, resources, board, carb, redirects, here, other, uses, carb, disambiguation, carb, agency, government, california, that, aims, reduce, pollution, established, 1967, when, then, governor, ronald, reagan, signed, mulford, carrell, combining, bureau, s. CARB redirects here For other uses see CARB disambiguation The California Air Resources Board CARB or ARB is an agency of the government of California that aims to reduce air pollution Established in 1967 when then governor Ronald Reagan signed the Mulford Carrell Act combining the Bureau of Air Sanitation and the Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Board CARB is a department within the cabinet level California Environmental Protection Agency California Air Resources BoardLogo of the California Air Resources BoardAgency overviewFormed1967Preceding agenciesBureau of Air SanitationMotor Vehicle Pollution Control BoardJurisdictionCaliforniaHeadquarters1001 I Street Sacramento CaliforniaEmployees1 365 1 Annual budget 581 1 million 1 Agency executiveLiane M Randolph ChairParent agencyCalifornia Environmental Protection AgencyWebsitehttp www arb ca govThe stated goals of CARB include attaining and maintaining healthy air quality protecting the public from exposure to toxic air contaminants and providing innovative approaches for complying with air pollution rules and regulations CARB has also been instrumental in driving innovation throughout the global automotive industry through programs such as its ZEV mandate One of CARB s responsibilities is to define vehicle emissions standards California is the only state permitted to issue emissions standards under the federal Clean Air Act subject to a waiver from the United States Environmental Protection Agency Other states may choose to follow CARB or the federal vehicle emission standards but may not set their own 2 Contents 1 Governance 2 Organizational structure 2 1 Air Quality Planning and Science Division 2 1 1 Atmospheric Modeling amp Support Section 3 Role in reducing greenhouse gases 3 1 Alternative Fuel Vehicle Incentive Program 3 2 Low Emission Vehicle Program 3 2 1 Required labeling 3 2 2 Vehicle categories 3 2 3 Smog forming compound emissions limits 3 2 4 Greenhouse gas emissions limits 3 2 5 Section 177 states 3 3 Zero Emission Vehicle Program 3 3 1 Vehicle definitions 3 3 2 Manufacturer sales volume 3 3 3 ZEV credit system 3 3 4 MOA demonstration fleet 3 3 5 Advanced Clean Cars 3 4 Hybrid and Zero Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project 3 5 OHV Emission Standards 3 6 Commercial Harbor Craft Regulation 3 7 Low carbon fuel standard 3 8 PHEV Research Center 3 9 Innovative Clean Transit 4 Regulation of ozone produced by air cleaners and ionizers 5 Southern California headquarters Mary D Nichols Campus 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksGovernance editCalifornia Air Resources Board leadership 3 Name Affiliation Appointed Term endsLiane M Randolph Chair December 2020 December 31 2026Cliff Rechtschaffen Public Member September 2023 December 31 2024John R Balmes MD Physician December 2007 December 31 2027Hector De La Torre Assembly June 2018 January 1 2025John Eisenhut Agriculture August 2013 December 31 2029Nora Vargas San Diego APCD February 2022 December 31 2024Dean Florez Senate February 2016 December 31 2024Eduardo Garcia Ex Officio Assembly February 2017Davina Hurt Bay Area AQMD December 2020 December 31 2026Gideon Kracov South Coast AQMD December 2020 December 31 2026Henry Stern Ex Officio Senate January 2023Tania Pacheco Werner PhD San Joaquin Valley APCD December 2020 December 31 2026Eric Guerra Sacramento Region Air Districts Member January 2023 December 31 2028Susan Shaheen Automotive Member January 2023 December 31 2028V Manuel Perez Air District Member January 2023 December 31 2028Diane Tavorkian Public August 31 2018 December 31 2029CARB s governing board is made up of 16 members with 2 non voting members appointed for legislative oversight one each by the California State Assembly and Senate 12 of the 14 voting members are appointed by the governor and subject to confirmation by the Senate five from local air districts four air pollution subject matter experts two members of the public and the Chair The other two voting members are appointed from environmental justice committees by the Assembly and Senate 3 Five of the governor appointed board members are chosen from regional air pollution control or air quality management districts including one each from 3 Bay Area AQMD San Francisco Bay Area currently John Gioia San Diego County APCD currently Nathan Fletcher San Joaquin Valley APCD currently Alexander Sherriffs M D South Coast AQMD currently Judy Mitchell A Sacramento area district Sacramento Metropolitan AQMD Yolo Solano AQMD Placer County APCD Feather River AQMD or El Dorado County AQMD currently Phil Serna nbsp Researchers at the Statewide Air Pollution Research Center manufacture smog using a photochemical tube reactor May 1972 Four governor appointed board members are subject matter experts in specific fields automotive engineering currently Dan Sperling science agriculture or law currently John Eisenhut medicine currently John R Balmes M D and air pollution control The governor is also responsible for two appointees from members of the public and the final governor appointee is the Board s Chair The first Chair of CARB was Dr Arie Jan Haagen Smit who was previously a professor at the California Institute of Technology and started research into air pollution in 1948 Dr Haagen Smit is credited with discovering the source of smog in California which led to the development of air pollution controls and standards 4 In honor of his legacy CARB started the Haagen Smit Clean Air Awards program in 2001 to recognize individuals who have had significant accomplishments in the field of air quality and climate change 5 The two legislature appointed board members work directly with communities affected by air pollution They are currently Diane Takvorian and Dean Florez appointed by the Assembly and Senate respectively Organizational structure editCARB is a part of the California Environmental Protection Agency an organization which reports directly to the Governor s Office in the Executive Branch of California State Government 6 CARB has 15 divisions and offices 7 Office of the Chair Executive Office Office of Community Air Protection Air Quality Planning and Science Division Emission Certification and Compliance Division Enforcement Division Industrial Strategies Division Mobile Source Control Division Mobile Source Laboratory Division Research Division Sustainable Transportation and Communities Division Transportation and Toxics Division Office of Information Services Administrative Services DivisionAir Quality Planning and Science Division edit nbsp California Air Resources Board Laboratory Los Angeles in 1973The division assesses the extent of California s air quality problems and the progress being made to abate them coordinates statewide development of clean air plans and maintains databases pertinent to air quality and emissions The division s technical support work provides a basis for clean air plans and CARB s regulatory programs This support includes management and interpretation of emission inventories air quality data meteorological data and of air quality modeling 8 9 The Air Quality Planning and Science Division has five branches 9 Special Assessment Branch Emission Inventory and Economic Analysis Branch Modeling amp Meteorology Branch Air Quality Planning Branch Mobile Source Analysis Branch Consumer Products and Air Quality Assessment BranchAtmospheric Modeling amp Support Section edit The Atmospheric Modeling amp Support Section is one of three sections within the Modeling amp Meteorology Branch The other two sections are the Regional Air Quality Modeling Section and the Meteorology Section 8 The air quality and atmospheric pollution dispersion models 10 11 routinely used by this Section include a number of the models recommended by the U S Environmental Protection Agency EPA The section uses models which were either developed by CARB or whose development was funded by CARB such as CALPUFF Originally developed by the Sigma Research Company SRC under contract to CARB Currently maintained by the TRC Solution Company under contract to the U S EPA CALGRID Developed by CARB and currently maintained by CARB 12 SARMAP Developed by CARB and currently maintained by CARB 13 Role in reducing greenhouse gases editSee also Climate change in California The California Air Resources Board is charged with implementing California s comprehensive suite of policies to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases In part due to the efforts of CARB California has successfully decoupled greenhouse gas emissions from economic growth and achieved its goal of reducing emissions to 1990 levels four years earlier than the target date of 2020 14 Alternative Fuel Vehicle Incentive Program edit Alternative Fuel Vehicle Incentive Program also known as Fueling Alternatives is funded by the California Air Resources Board CARB offered throughout the State of California and administered by the California Center for Sustainable Energy CCSE 15 Low Emission Vehicle Program edit nbsp Smog in San Gabriel May 1972The CARB first adopted the Low Emission Vehicle LEV Program standards in 1990 to address smog forming pollutants 16 17 which covered automobiles sold in California from 1994 through 2003 An amendment to the LEV Program known as LEV II was adopted in 1999 and covered vehicles for the 2004 through 2014 model years 18 Greenhouse gas GHG emission regulations were adopted in 2004 starting for the 2009 model year and are named the Pavley standards after Assemblymember Fran Pavley who had written Assembly Bill 1493 in 2002 to establish them 19 20 A second amendment LEV III was adopted in 2012 and covers vehicles sold from 2015 onward for both smog superseding LEV II and GHG superseding Pavley emissions 21 22 The rules created under the LEV Program have been codified as specific sections in Title 13 of the California Code of Regulations 23 in general LEV I is 1960 1 LEV II is 1961 Pavley is 1961 1 LEV III is 1961 2 smog forming pollutants and 1961 3 GHG The ZEV regulations which were initially part of LEV I have been broken out separately into 1962 24 For comparison the average new car sold in 1965 would produce approximately 2 000 lb 910 kg of hydrocarbons over 100 000 mi 160 000 km of driving under the LEV I standards the average new car sold in 1998 was projected to produce hydrocarbon emissions of 50 lb 23 kg over the same distance and under LEV II the average new car in 2010 would further reduce hydrocarbon emissions to 10 lb 4 5 kg 25 Required labeling edit Global Warming amp Smog Scores GlobalWarmingScore CO2 g mi SmogScore MY 2009 2013 2017 a 26 MY 2018 b 27 CALEV II EPATier 2 NMOG NOx g mi CALEV III EPATier 3 NMOG NOx g mi 10 lt 200 10 ZEV Bin 1 0 000 ZEV Bin 0 0 0009 200 239 9 AT PZEV PZEV 0 030 8 240 279 8 SULEV Bin 2 0 030 SULEV20 Bin 20 0 0207 280 319 7 Bin 3 0 085 SULEV30 Bin 30 0 0306 320 359 6 Bin 4 0 110 ULEV50 Bin 50 0 0505 360 399 5 ULEV 0 125 ULEV70 Bin 70 0 0704 400 439 4 LEV Bin 5 0 160 3 440 479 3 Bin 6 0 190 0 200 ULEV125 Bin 125 0 1252 480 519 2 Bin 7 0 240 1 520 1 c Bin 8a 0 325 LEV160 Bin 160 0 160Notes Based on the scoring for the Environmental Performance Label applied to new vehicles model years 2009 2012 in California The California label was aligned with Federal standards in 2013 Scoring realigned with LEV III Tier 3 scores starting in model year 2018 Note the change in standards for example a LEV under LEV II 160 mg mi which was rated with a smog score of 4 under the old label would now be rated with as LEV160 under LEV III and would receive a smog score of 1 ULEV under California LEV I standard In 2005 the California State Assembly passed AB 1229 which required all new vehicles manufactured after January 1 2009 to bear an Environmental Performance Label which scored the emissions performance of the vehicle on two scales ranging between 1 worst and 10 best one for global warming emissions of GHG such as N2 O CH4 air conditioning refrigerants and CO2 and one for smog forming compounds non methane organic gases NMOG NOx and HC 26 28 The Federal Government followed suit and required a similar smog score on new vehicles sold starting in 2013 the standards were realigned for labels applied to 2018 model year vehicles Vehicle categories edit The LEV program has established several categories of reduced emissions vehicles LEV I defined LEV and ULEV vehicles and added TLEV and Tier 1 temporary classifications that would not be sold after 2003 LEV II added SULEV and PZEV vehicles and LEV III tightened emission standards The actual emission levels depend on the standards in use LEV Low Emission Vehicle The least stringent emission standard for all new cars sold in California beyond 2004 ULEV Ultra Low Emission Vehicle 50 cleaner than the average new 2003 model year vehicle SULEV Super Ultra Low Emission Vehicle These vehicles emit substantially lower levels of hydrocarbons carbon monoxide oxides of nitrogen and particulate matter than conventional vehicles They are 90 cleaner than the average new 2003 model year vehicle LEV I defined emission limits for several different classes of vehicle including passenger cars PC light duty trucks LDT and medium duty vehicles MDV Heavy duty vehicles were specifically excluded from LEV I LEV I also defined a loaded vehicle weight LVW as the vehicle s Curb weight plus an allowance of 300 lb 140 kg In general the most stringent standards were applied to passenger cars and light duty trucks with a LVW up to 3 750 lb 1 700 kg these light LDTs were later denoted LDT1 under LEV II 17 LEV II increased the scope of vehicles classed as light duty trucks to encompass a higher GVWR up to 8 500 lb 3 900 kg compared to the LEV I standard of 6 000 lb 2 700 kg In addition LEV I had defined less stringent limits for heavier LDTs denoted LDT2 with a LVW 3 751 5 750 lb 1 701 2 608 kg LEV II closed that discrepancy and defined a single emissions standard for all PCs and LDTs 18 Under LEV III medium duty passenger vehicles MDPV were brought under the most stringent standards alongside PCs and LDTs 21 Vehicle classes under the LEV regulations 17 18 21 Class Abbr GVWR NotesPassenger car PC Designed primarily for transportation of persons with a design capacity of 12 people Light duty truck LDT 6 000 lb2 700 kg a Designed primarily for transportation of property derivatives of those or available with special features for off street use LDT1 was defined as those with LVW up to 3 750 lb 1 700 kg and LDT2 was defined as those with LVW from 3 751 to 5 750 lb 1 701 to 2 608 kg 8 500 lb3 900 kg b Medium duty vehicle MDV 8 500 lb3 900 kg c Any non passenger vehicle with a GVWR gt 6 000 lb 2 700 kg and less than the limits shown here 14 000 lb6 400 kg d Notes For model years before 2000 For model years 2000 and subsequent For model years before 1995 For model years 1995 and subsequent or model years 1992 and subsequent LEV ULEV SULEV or ZEV Smog forming compound emissions limits edit Rather than providing a single standard for vehicles based on age purpose and weight the LEV I standards introduced different tiers of limits for smog forming compound emissions starting in the 1995 model year After 2003 LEV was the minimum standard to be met 17 California Emissions Standards a b c 29 Category NMOG d NOx e CO PM f HCHOLEV I g 17 LEV II h 18 LEV III i 21 LEV I g LEV II h LEV III i LEV I g LEV II h LEV III i LEV I g LEV II h LEV III i Tier 1 j 0 91 k l m 4 2 n o TLEV j 0 756 p 4 2 0 08 0 018 LEV LEV160 0 390 q 0 160 r 0 160 4 2 4 2 4 2 0 08 0 01 0 01 0 018 0 018 0 004ULEV ULEV125 0 355 s 0 125 t 0 125 2 1 2 1 2 1 0 04 0 01 0 01 0 011 0 011 0 004ULEV70 0 070 1 7ULEV50 0 050SULEV u SULEV30 0 030 v 0 030 1 0 1 0 0 01 0 01 0 004 0 004SULEV20 0 020Notes Values are in grams per mile for all passenger cars and those light duty trucks with a loaded vehicle weight total of kerb weight plus 300 lb 140 kg driver less than 3 750 lb 1 700 kg tested under the FTP 75 protocol Under LEV II and LEV III the definition of light duty trucks was expanded to encompass all vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of 8 500 lb 3 900 kg or less Under LEV III this category also now includes all medium duty passenger vehicles with a GVWR of 10 000 lb 4 500 kg or less Non methane organic gases NMOG and NOx were reported separately under LEV I and LEV II Particulate Matter a b c d LEV I standards are given for emissions at the 100 000 mi 160 000 km 10 year age a b c d LEV II standards are given for emissions at the 120 000 mi 190 000 km 11 year age a b c d LEV III standards are given for emissions at the 150 000 mi 240 000 km age a b Tier 1 and transitional LEV TLEV vehicles were not sold after 2003 LEV I 0 31 g mi NMOG 0 6 g mi NOx LEV I 0 31 g mi NMOG 1 0 g mi NOx for diesel powered vehicles For comparison the values for 1988 94 model year passenger cars light duty trucks and medium duty trucks lt 3 750 LVW were 0 39 0 46 g mi NMOG and 0 4 1 0 g mi NOx For comparison the values for 1988 94 model year passenger cars were 7 0 8 3 g mi CO and for light duty trucks and medium duty trucks lt 3 750 LVW 9 0 10 6 g mi CO Formaldehyde standards provided for 1993 and newer model year vehicles fueled by methanol and ethanol for passenger cars light duty trucks and medium duty trucks lt 3 750 LVW 0 023 g mi HCHO for 1993 95 and 0 015 g mi HCHO for 1996 LEV I 0 156 g mi NMOG 0 6 g mi NOx LEV I 0 090 g mi NMOG 0 3 g mi NOx LEV II 0 090 g mi NMOG 0 07 g mi NOx LEV I 0 055 g mi NMOG 0 3 g mi NOx LEV II 0 055 g mi NMOG 0 07 g mi NOx SULEV for passenger cars and light duty trucks was not defined until LEV II LEV II 0 010 g mi NMOG 0 02 g mi NOxGreenhouse gas emissions limits edit nbsp Sunlight filtered through smog near Blythe May 1972CARB adopted regulations for limits on greenhouse gas emissions in 2004 starting with the 2009 model year to support the direction provided by AB 1493 19 In June 2005 Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed Executive Order S 03 05 which required a reduction in California GHG emissions targeting an 80 reduction compared to 1990 levels by 2050 30 Assembly Bill 32 better known as the California Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006 codified these requirements 31 CARB filed a waiver request with the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA under Section 209 b of the Clean Air Act in December 2005 to permit it to establish limits on greenhouse gas emissions although the waiver request was initially denied in March 2008 it was later approved on June 30 2009 after President Barack Obama signed a Presidential Memorandum directing the EPA to reconsider the waiver 19 32 In the initial denial EPA Administrator Stephen L Johnson stated the Clean Air Act was not intended to allow California to promulgate state standards for emissions from new motor vehicles designed to address global climate change problems and further that he did not believe the effects of climate change in California are compelling and extraordinary compared to the effects in the rest of the country 33 Johnson s successor Lisa P Jackson signed the waiver overturning Johnson s denial writing that EPA must grant California a waiver if California determines that its standards are in the aggregate at least as protective of the public health and welfare as applicable Federal standards Jackson also noted that in the history of the waiver process over 50 waivers had been granted and only one had been fully denied namely the March 2008 denial of the GHG emissions regulation 34 Greenhouse gas fleet average emissions targets 35 ModelYear g mi CO2 equivalent PCs amp LDT1s LDT2s amp MDPVs2009 323 4392010 301 4202011 267 3902012 233 3612013 227 3552014 222 3502015 213 3412016 205 332CARB decided to adopt regulation of GHG emissions under Executive Order G 05 061 which provided phase in targets for fleet average GHG emissions in CO2 equivalent grams per mile starting with the 2009 model year 35 The calculation of CO2 equivalent emissions was based on contributions from four different chemicals CO2 N2 O CH4 and air conditioning refrigerants The emissions in g mi CO2 equivalent are calculated according to the formula C O 2 e q u i v a l e n t C O 2 296 N 2 O 23 C H 4 A C d i r e c t A C i n d i r e c t displaystyle CO 2 mathrm equivalent CO 2 296 times N 2 O 23 times CH 4 AC mathrm direct AC mathrm indirect nbsp which has two terms for direct and indirect emissions allowances of air conditioning refrigerants depending on the refrigerant used such as HFC134a and the system design Vehicles powered by alternative fuels use a slightly modified formula C O 2 e q u i v a l e n t C O 2 A C i n d i r e c t F 296 N 2 O 23 C H 4 A C d i r e c t displaystyle CO 2 mathrm equivalent CO 2 AC mathrm indirect times F 296 times N 2 O 23 times CH 4 AC mathrm direct nbsp where F displaystyle F nbsp is a fuel adjustment factor depending on the alternative fuel used 1 03 for natural gas 0 89 for LPG and 0 74 for E85 ZEVs are also required to calculate GHG as the processes to generate the energy or fuel used also produce GHG For ZEVs C O 2 e q u i v a l e n t U A C d i r e c t displaystyle CO 2 mathrm equivalent U AC mathrm direct nbsp where U displaystyle U nbsp is the upstream emissions factor 130 g mi for battery electric vehicles 210 for hydrogen fuel cell and 290 for hydrogen internal combustion 35 Direct CO2 emissions could be calculated in a relatively straightforward fashion based on fuel consumption 36 Manufacturers that do not wish to measure N2 O emissions may assume a value of 0 006 g mi 35 An update was issued in 2010 which allowed manufacturers to calculate GHG emissions using CAFE data for conventionally powered vehicles the contribution from the nitrous oxide and methane terms could be assumed to be 1 9 g mi 37 CARB voted unanimously in March 2017 to require automakers to average 54 5 miles per US gallon 4 32 L 100 km 65 5 mpg imp for new cars in 2025 38 Section 177 states edit nbsp Section 177 states blue LEV only green LEV ZEV red LEV repealed California emissions states 39 40 41 State LEV ZEV MYCA Yes Yes 2005CO Yes Yes 2022CT Yes Yes 2008DC Yes No 2012DE Yes No 2014MA Yes Yes 2009MD Yes Yes 2011ME Yes Yes 2009MN Yes Yes 2025 anticipated NJ Yes Yes 2009NM Yes Yes 2026NV Yes Yes 2025NY Yes Yes 2009OR Yes Yes 2009PA Yes No 2008RI Yes Yes 2009VA Yes Yes 2025VT Yes Yes 2009WA Yes Yes 2009 ZEV 2025 Because California had emissions regulations prior to the 1977 Clean Air Act under Section 177 of that bill 42 other states may adopt the more stringent California emissions regulations as an alternative to federal standards Thirteen other states and the District of Columbia have chosen to do so and ten of those have additionally adopted the California Zero Emission Vehicle regulations 39 40 43 In December 2020 Minnesota announced its intention to adopt California LEV and ZEV rules 44 following a hearing before an administrative law judge in February 2021 the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency adopted the California regulations 45 46 In August 2022 Virginia citing to a 2021 law announced it would follow California regulations for ZEV registrations 47 Arizona and New Mexico had previously adopted California LEV regulations under Section 177 but later repealed those states clean car standards in 2012 48 and 2013 49 respectively 50 In Canada the province of Quebec adopted CARB standards effective in 2010 51 CARB and the Government of Canada entered into a Memorandum of Understanding in June 2019 to cooperate on greenhouse gas emissions mitigation 52 Zero Emission Vehicle Program edit The CARB Zero Emission Vehicle ZEV program was enacted by the California government starting in 1990 to promote the use of zero emission vehicles 53 The program goal is to reduce the pervasive air pollution affecting the main metropolitan areas in the state particularly in Los Angeles where prolonged pollution episodes are frequent The California ZEV rule was first adopted by CARB as part of the 1990 Low Emission Vehicle LEV I Program 16 The focus of the 1990 rules ZEV 90 was to meet air quality standards for ozone rather than the reduction of greenhouse gas GHG emissions 54 5 Under LEV II in 1999 the ZEV regulations were moved to a separate section 13 CCR 1962 and the requirements for ZEVs as a percentage of fleet sales was made more formal Executive Order S 03 05 2005 and Assembly Bills 1493 2002 and 32 2006 prompted CARB to reevaluate the ZEV program as last amended in 1996 which had been primarily concerned with reducing emissions of smog forming pollutants 54 By the time AB 32 passed in 2006 vehicles complying with PZEV and AT PZEV standards had become commercially successful and the ZEV program could then shift towards reducing both smog forming compounds and greenhouse gases 54 The next set of ZEV regulations were adopted in 2012 with LEV III CARB put both LEV and ZEV rules together as the Advanced Clean Cars Program ACC adopted in 2012 which included regulations for cars sold through the 2025 model year The regulations include updates to regulations for LEV III for smog forming emissions LEV III GHG for greenhouse gas emissions and ZEV 55 56 57 Since then in September 2020 Governor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order directing that by 2035 all new cars and passenger trucks sold in California will be zero emission vehicles 58 Executive Order N 79 20 directs CARB to develop regulations to require that ZEVs be an increasing share of new vehicles sold in the state with light duty cars and trucks and off road vehicles and equipment meeting the 100 ZEV goal by 2035 and medium and heavy duty trucks and buses meeting the same 100 ZEV goal by 2045 The order also directs Caltrans to develop near term actions to encourage an integrated statewide rail and transit network and infrastructure to support bicycles and pedestrians 59 In response CARB began development of the Advanced Clean Cars II ACC II Program focusing on emissions of vehicles sold after 2025 ACC II is scheduled for consideration before CARB in June 2022 60 Vehicle definitions edit LEV I defined a ZEV as one that produces zero emissions of any criteria pollutants under any and all possible operational modes and conditions A vehicle could still qualify as a ZEV with a fuel fired heater as long as the heater was unable to be operated at ambient temperatures above 40 F 4 C and did not have any evaporative emissions 17 2 6 2 7 Under LEV II ZEV 99 the ZEV definition was updated to include precursor pollutants but did not consider upstream emissions from power plants 61 C 1 The ZEV regulation has evolved and been modified several times since 1990 and several new partial or low emission categories were created and defined 62 63 64 65 including the introduction of PZEV and AT PZEV categories in ZEV 99 61 B 1 B 2 PZEV Partial Zero Emission Vehicle Meets SULEV tailpipe standards has a 15 year 150 000 mile warranty and zero evaporative emissions These vehicles are 80 cleaner than the average 2002 model year car AT PZEV Advanced Technology PZEV These are advanced technology vehicles that meet PZEV standards and include ZEV enabling technology typically hybrid electric vehicles HEV They are 80 cleaner than the average 2002 model year car ZEV Zero Emission Vehicle Zero tailpipe emissions and 98 cleaner than the average new 2003 model year vehicle Manufacturer sales volume edit Under ZEV 90 CARB classified manufacturers according to the average sales per year between 1989 and 1993 small volume manufacturers were those that sold 3 000 or fewer new vehicles per year intermediate volume manufacturers sold between 3 001 and 35 000 and large volume manufacturers sold more than 35 000 per year 17 2 3 For large volume manufacturers CARB required that 2 of 1998 to 2000 model year vehicles sold were ZEVs ramping up to 5 ZEVs by 2001 and 10 ZEVs in 2003 and beyond Intermediate volume manufacturers were not required to meet the goals until 2003 and small volume manufacturers were exempted These percentages were calculated based on total production of passenger cars and light duty trucks with a loaded vehicle weight LVW less than 3 750 lb 1 700 kg 17 3 22 to 3 24 66 ZEV credit system edit ZEV 96 Credits 67 ModelYear 2 ZEV Count 3 ZEV CountRange mi Specific Energy Wh kg Range mi Specific Energy Wh kg 1996 97 any any 70 401998 100 1301999 50 602000 140 1752001 02 60 90The LEV I rules also introduced the concept of emission credits Under LEV I the vehicle fleet average emissions rate of non methane organic gases NMOG produced by a manufacturer was required to meet increasingly stringent requirements starting in 1994 17 3 18 The calculation of fleet average NMOG emissions was based on a weighted sum of vehicle NMOG emissions based on the number sold and type of certification i e TLEV LEV ULEV etc divided by the total number of vehicles produced including ZEVs 17 3 20 Manufacturers whose fleet average NMOG emissions met or exceeded the NMOG emissions goal would be subjected to civil penalties those which fell below the goal would receive credits which could then be marketed to other manufacturers 17 3 24 The 1996 amendments to the ZEV regulations in LEV I ZEV 96 introduced credits where a ZEV could be counted more than once based on vehicle range or battery specific energy to encourage deployment of ZEVs prior to 2003 67 3 4 Under LEV II ZEV 99 the PZEV and AT PZEV categories were introduced and the percentage of ZEVs sold by a manufacturer could be partially met by the sales of PZEV and AT PZEVs 61 C 2 If a vehicle met PZEV criteria it qualified for a credit equal to 0 2 of one ZEV for the purposes of calculating that manufacturer s ZEV production 61 C 6 AT PZEVs capable of traveling with zero emissions for a limited range were allowed additional credit if the urban all electric range was at least ten miles 61 C 7 ZEVs that were introduced prior to 2003 received a multiplier with a value ranging up to 10 a single ZEV depending on the all electric range and fast charging capability 61 C 11 C 12 MOA demonstration fleet edit MOA EVs 1997 68 Mfr Model Date Battery Range Qty 12 97 Chrysler EPIC 97 SLA 60 mi97 km 17Ford Ranger EV 97 SLA 60 mi97 km 10GM EV1 12 96 SLA 75 mi121 km 265GM S 10 EV 97 SLA 40 mi64 km 354NiMH 80 mi130 km 7Honda EV Plus 05 97 NiMH 125 mi201 km 104Nissan Altra 98 Li ion 120 mi190 km Toyota RAV4 EV 10 97 NiMH 125 mi201 km 69In March 1996 ZEV 96 eliminated the ZEV ramp up planned to start in 1998 but the goal of 10 ZEVs by 2003 was retained with credits granted for sales of partial ZEVs PZEVs 67 62 According to comment responses CARB determined that advanced batteries would not be ready in time to meet the ZEV requirements until at least 2003 69 6 7 nbsp GM EV1In conjunction with relaxing the requirements in ZEV 96 CARB signed memoranda of agreement MOAs with the seven large scale manufacturers to begin rolling out demonstration fleets of ZEVs with limited public availability in the near term The GM EV1 was the first battery electric vehicle BEV offered to the public in partial fulfillment of the agreement with CARB The EV1 was available only through a US 399 equivalent to 740 in 2022 month lease starting in December 1996 the initial markets were South Coast San Diego and Arizona and expanded to Sacramento and the Bay Area GM also offered an electric S 10 pickup truck to fleet operators 68 In 1997 Honda EV Plus May 1997 Toyota RAV4 EV October 1997 and Chrysler EPIC 1997 followed suit Ford also introduced the Ranger EV for the 1998 model year and Nissan stated they planned to offer the Altra in the 1998 model year as well to fulfill the MOA As an acceptable alternative Mazda stated they would purchase ZEV credits from Ford 68 7 10 Advanced Clean Cars edit The Low Emission Vehicle Program was revised to define modified ZEV regulations for 2015 models 62 70 71 CARB estimates that ACC will result in 10 of all sales to be ZEVs by 2025 72 5 The share remained at 3 between 2014 and 2016 Battery vehicles receive 3 or 4 credits while fuel cell cars receive 9 As of 2016 update a credit has a market value of 3 4 000 and some automakers have more credits than required 73 74 CARB held a public workshop in September 2020 where several new consumer friendly regulations for ZEVs were proposed to improve adoption 75 Standardization of a DC Fast Charge inlet proposing to use CCS Combo 1 with adapters provided by the vehicle manufacturer if applicable Standardization of vehicle and battery data to assist assessment of need for repairs condition Implement a standardized battery state of health SOH indicator using SAE J1634 dynamometer testing to define battery capacity and define a value of battery SOH that qualifies for warranty repair Make ZEV powertrain service and repair information available to independent technicians and repair shops including standardization of communication protocols for vehicle data In May 2021 additional draft requirements were added 76 Durability BEVs to maintain 80 of certified range for 15 years 150 000 miles Durability FCEVs to maintain 90 of fuel cell system output power after 4 000 hours of operation Battery Labelling standardized content to improve the efficiency of recycling batteries to recover materials or potential repurposingTo improve access to ZEVs CARB added proposed environmental justice EJ credits in August 2021 for manufacturers who improve options for clean transportation to underserved communities such as by providing a discount on a ZEV that would be used in a community based clean mobility program The August workshop also included additional regulations for ZEVs 77 Range starting in 2026 minimum 2 cycle range to be 200 mi 320 km On board charger minimum 5 76 kW for AC Level 2 charging sufficient for a BEV to charge overnight 8 hours from a 30A sourceGraphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Stringency proposal Proposed regulatory requirement Minimum vehicle stringency with EJ credits The final workshop in October 2021 proposed that ZEVs would be taken out of fleet calculations for vehicle emissions and provided yearly targets for ZEV vehicle sales as a percent of total sales including potential EJ credits Additionally the required warranty period and requirements to take credit for PHEV sales were defined 78 Battery to retain 80 SoH for 8 years 100 000 miles PHEVs to meet one of two requirements Transitional PHEVs 2026 28 minimum 30 mi 48 km all electric range with additional credit if vehicle exceeds 10 mi 16 km on the US06 high speed acceleration cycle 8 year 100 000 80 SOH battery warranty 5 76 kW on board charger Full credit PHEVs 2026 minimum 50 mi 80 km all electric range minimum 40 mi 64 km on the US06 high speed acceleration cycle 8 year 100 000 80 SOH battery warranty 5 76 kW on board charger Small volume manufacturers defined as those selling fewer than 4 500 cars per year are required to comply with the ZEV mandate starting with the 2035 model yearHybrid and Zero Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project edit California Hybrid and Zero Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project HVIP for short offers up front discounts on medium and heavy duty electric trucks Additionally discounts will be increased for public transit agencies school buses for public school districts and vehicles operating in disadvantaged communities For example a public school district could receive up to 198 000 off the price of a new electric bus a public transit agency could receive 69 000 off the price of a new Class 4 electric shuttle 79 Launched by the California Air Resources Board in 2009 the project is part of California Climate Investments 80 OHV Emission Standards edit The California DMV implements the policy dictates of the California Air Resources Board CARB with respect to registration of off highway motor vehicles OHVs 81 Registration consists of ID plates or placards issued by the DMV 82 Operating a motorized vehicle off highway in California requires either a Green Sticker or a Red Sticker ID The Green Sticker indicates that the vehicle has passed emission requirements The Red Sticker issued through 2021 restricts OHV use due to not meeting emission standards established by the CARB The red sticker program began in 1994 when CARB adopted standards for emissions from two stroke engines used primarily on dirt bikes Between 1998 and 2003 the red sticker program was refined allowing vehicles that did not meet peak ozone season standards to be operated only at specific times of the year 83 As of model year 2022 the CARB no longer authorizes issuing of red stickers 84 Commercial Harbor Craft Regulation edit The California Air Resources Board s CARB Commercial Harbor Craft regulation is a regulatory framework aimed at reducing emissions from commercial vessels operating in California s harbors and ports The rule primarily targets diesel powered vessels such as ferries tugboats and other workboats that operate in and around California s ports 85 86 Since the original adoption of regulation in 2008 and its amendments in 2010 and 2022 vessel owners in the state have been required to either replace their engines or send their boats out of the state 87 88 Low carbon fuel standard edit Main article Low carbon fuel standard The Low Carbon Fuel Standard LCFS requires oil refineries and distributors to ensure that the mix of fuel they sell in the Californian market meets the established declining targets for greenhouse gas emissions measured in CO2 equivalent grams per unit of fuel energy sold for transport purposes The 2007 Governor s LCFS directive calls for a reduction of at least 10 in the carbon intensity of California s transportation fuels by 2020 These reductions include not only tailpipe emissions but also all other associated emissions from production distribution and use of transport fuels within the state Therefore California LCFS considers the fuel s full life cycle also known as the well to wheels or seed to wheels efficiency of transport fuels 16 89 The standard is aimed to reduce the state s dependence on petroleum create a market for clean transportation technology and stimulate the production and use of alternative low carbon fuels in California 90 On April 23 2009 CARB approved the specific rules for the LCFS that will go into effect in January 2011 91 92 The rule proposal prepared by its technical staff was approved by a 9 1 vote to set the 2020 maximum carbon intensity reference value to 86 grams of carbon dioxide released per megajoule of energy produced 90 93 PHEV Research Center edit Main article PHEV Research Center The PHEV Research Center was launched with funding from the California Air Resources Board Innovative Clean Transit edit Main article Innovative Clean Transit rule Under the Innovative Clean Transit formerly known as the Advanced Clean Transit regulation adopted in December 2018 public transportation agencies in California will gradually transition to a zero emission bus fleet by 2040 94 Large transit agencies defined as those operating more than 65 buses in the San Joaquin Valley Air Basin or South Coast Air Quality Management District or those operating more than 100 buses elsewhere with populations greater than 200 000 are required to have 25 of new bus purchases as zero emission buses ZEBs starting in 2023 50 of new purchases as ZEBs starting in 2026 and 100 of new purchases as ZEBs starting in 2029 Small transit agencies are required to make 25 of new purchases as ZEBs in 2026 and 100 of new purchases as ZEBs in 2029 Per the regulation ZEBs are defined to include battery electric buses and fuel cell buses but do not include electric trolleybuses which draw power from overhead lines 95 The Antelope Valley Transit Authority has set a goal to be the first all electric fleet by the end of 2018 ahead of the tightened regulations 96 Regulation of ozone produced by air cleaners and ionizers editThe California Air Resources Board has a page listing air cleaners many with ionizers meeting their indoor ozone limit of 0 050 parts per million 97 From that article All portable indoor air cleaning devices sold in California must be certified by the California Air Resources Board CARB To be certified air cleaners must be tested for electrical safety and ozone emissions and meet an ozone emission concentration limit of 0 050 parts per million For more information about the regulation visit the air cleaner regulation Southern California headquarters Mary D Nichols Campus edit nbsp California Air Resources Board s Southern California headquarters in Riverside CAOn October 27 2017 CARB broke ground on its new state of the art Southern California headquarters CARB chose the site near the University of California Riverside in March 2016 and completed environmental studies in June 2017 Construction costs of 419 million which include 108 million for specialized laboratory and testing equipment were approved by the Legislature in July Of those costs 154 million comes from fines paid by Volkswagen for air quality violations related to the diesel car cheating case Additional funds will come from the Motor Vehicle Account the Air Pollution Control Fund and the Vehicle Inspection Repair Fund 98 Over a decade of planning has gone into the development of a replacement for CARB s aging Haagen Smit Laboratory Opened in 1973 in El Monte California the Haagen Smit Laboratory is the site of many of CARB s groundbreaking efforts to reduce the emissions of cars and trucks as well as efforts to introduce zero emission and plug in vehicles to California In 2015 engineers and technicians based at the Haagen Smit Laboratory were instrumental in discovering the infamous VW diesel defeat device leading to the largest emissions control violation settlement in national and California history The new campus features an extended range of dedicated test cells including heavy duty testing There is also workspace for accommodating new test methods for future generations of vehicles and space for developing enhanced on board diagnostics and portable emissions measurement systems The facility also includes a separate advanced chemistry laboratory The Southern California Headquarters office and administration space accommodates 460 employees and includes visitor reception and public areas a press room flexible conference and workshop space and a 250 person public auditorium Sustainability drove the striking architecture and every detail of the campus Designed by ZGF Architects and built by Hensel Phelps the new headquarters is built for the future At 402 000 square feet it is designed to be the largest Zero Net Energy building in the United States aided by solar arrays throughout the campus that generate 3 5 Megawatts of electricity and a chilled beam temperature management system that provides increased energy efficiency and occupant comfort As a result the facility achieves Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design LEED Platinum certification and California Green Building Standards Code CALGreen Tier 2 standards and is designed to achieve Zero Net Energy performance On November 18 2021 CARB dedicated the new Southern California headquarters in honor of former Chair Mary D Nichols whose career at CARB spanned four decades under three different California governors 99 See also edit nbsp California portalCalifornia Air Resources BoardList of California Air Districts 2008 California Statewide Truck and Bus Rule Carl Moyer Memorial Air Quality Standards Attainment ProgramOtherBioenergy Action Plan California Center for Sustainable Energy California Code of Regulations California Energy Commission California Environmental Protection Agency California Public Utilities Commission Carl Moyer Program Ecology of California Emission standards Emissions trading Greenhouse gas emissions by the United States Million Solar Roofs SB 1 Plug in hybrids in California Pollution in California Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative Spare the Air program Texas Low Emission Diesel standards Timeline of major US environmental and occupational health regulation Upstream emission factor US Emission standard Vehicle acronyms and abbreviations Who Killed the Electric Car Zero emissions vehicleReferences edit a b 2015 16 Budget of California Retrieved January 1 2016 Vehicle Emissions California Waivers and Authorizations United States Environmental Protection Agency August 2 2016 Retrieved November 25 2016 a b c Leadership California Air Resources Board California Air Resources Board Retrieved 5 December 2018 Dr Arie Haagen Smit Founding Chairman California Air Resources Board Retrieved 5 December 2018 Haagen Smit Clean Air Awards California Air Resources Board Retrieved 26 November 2023 Organization of the California Air Resources Board California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2021 10 23 Organization of the California Air Resources Board www arb ca gov Archived from the original on 2020 04 20 a b ARB s Planning and Technical Support Division Archived 2006 09 23 at the Wayback Machine arb ca gov accessed February 28 2015 a b Organization Air Quality Planning and Science Division California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2021 10 23 Turner D B 1994 Workbook of atmospheric dispersion estimates an introduction to dispersion modeling 2nd ed CRC Press ISBN 978 1 56670 023 8 Beychok Milton R 2005 Fundamentals of Stack Gas Dispersion 4th ed author published ISBN 978 0 9644588 0 2 CALGRID Model Archived from the original on 2006 09 23 Retrieved 2006 08 26 CARB s SARMAP Model Archived 2006 09 23 at the Wayback Machine Climate Pollutants Fall Below 1990 Levels for First Time California Air Resources Board Retrieved 27 July 2018 Incentive Program for Alternative Fuels and Vehicles California Air Resources Board 2010 09 30 Retrieved 2011 11 07 a b c Sperling Daniel Gordon Deborah 2009 Two billion cars driving toward sustainability New York Oxford University Press pp 24 189 191 ISBN 978 0 19 537664 7 Retrieved 6 December 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k California exhaust emission standards and test procedures for 1988 and subsequent model passenger cars light duty trucks and medium duty vehicles PDF California Environmental Protection Agency Air Resources Board June 24 1996 Retrieved 5 December 2018 a b c d Attachment A 2 California 2001 through 2014 model criteria pollutant exhaust emission standards and test procedures and 2009 through 2016 greenhouse gas exhaust emission standards and test procedures for passenger cars light duty trucks and medium duty vehicles PDF California Environmental Protection Agency Air Resources Board March 22 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2018 a b c Clean Car Standards Pavley Assembly Bill 1493 California Air Resources Board January 11 2017 Retrieved 7 December 2018 California State Assembly An act to amend Section 42823 of and to add Section 43018 5 to the Health and Safety Code relating to air quality Session of the Legislature Statutes of California State of California Ch 200 p 864 direct URL a b c d Attachment A 3 California 2015 and subsequent model criteria pollutant exhaust emission standards and test procedures and 2017 and subsequent greenhouse gas exhaust emission standards and test procedures for passenger cars light duty trucks and medium duty vehicles PDF California Environmental Protection Agency Air Resources Board March 22 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Low Emission Vehicle Program California Air Resources Board January 25 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Low Emission Vehicle Regulations and Test Procedures California Air Resources Board October 18 2017 Retrieved 5 December 2018 The California Low Emission Vehicle Regulations With Amendments Effective October 16 2017 PDF California Air Resources Board October 16 2017 Archived from the original PDF on 20 December 2017 Retrieved 6 December 2018 Fact Sheet LEV II Amendments to California s Low Emission Vehicle regulations PDF California Air Resources Board February 1999 Retrieved 5 December 2018 a b Chiladakis Lisa March 2010 Environmental Performance Label PDF California Air Resources Board Retrieved 5 December 2018 Understand the Smog Rating DriveClean Retrieved 5 December 2018 California State Assembly An act to amend Section 43200 of and to add Section 43200 1 to the Health and Safety Code relating to air pollution Session of the Legislature Statutes of California State of California Ch 575 p 4355 direct URL Emission Standards United States Cars and Light Duty Trucks California DieselNet Retrieved 5 December 2018 California Executive Order S 3 05 State of California Office of the Governor June 1 2005 Archived from the original on 22 September 2006 Retrieved 6 December 2018 California State Assembly An act to add Division 25 5 commencing with Section 38500 to the Health and Safety Code relating to air pollution Session of the Legislature Statutes of California State of California Ch 488 p 3419 direct URL California Greenhouse Gas Waiver Request United States Environmental Protection Agency June 30 2009 Retrieved 7 December 2018 Johnson Stephen L March 6 2008 California State Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Standards Notice of Decision Denying a Waiver of Clean Air Act Preemption for Californias 2009 and Subsequent Model Year Greenhouse Gas Emission Standards for New Motor Vehicles United States Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 7 December 2018 Jackson Lisa P June 30 2009 California State Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Standards Notice of Decision Denying a Waiver of Clean Air Act Preemption for Californias 2009 and Subsequent Model Year Greenhouse Gas Emission Standards for New Motor Vehicles United States Environmental Protection Agency Retrieved 7 December 2018 a b c d Final Regulation Order Amendments to Sections 1900 and 1961 and Adoption of new Section 1961 1 Title 13 California Code of Regulations PDF California Air Resources Board September 15 2005 Retrieved 7 December 2018 How to calculate the CO2 emission from the fuel consumption ecoscore Retrieved 7 December 2018 Final Regulation Order PDF California Air Resources Board April 1 2010 Retrieved 7 December 2018 What s New List Serve Post Display www arb ca gov a b States that have Adopted California s Vehicle Standards under Section 177 of the Federal Clean Air Act California Air Resources Board March 27 2019 Retrieved 18 October 2019 a b Fact Sheet The Zero Emission Vehicle ZEV Regulation PDF California Air Resources Board Retrieved 5 December 2018 States Adopting California s Clean Cars Standards Maryland Department of the Environment Retrieved 5 December 2018 42 U S C 7507 Neustifter Jeremy November 16 2018 Air Quality Control Commission approves low emission vehicle standards Press release State of Colorado Department of Public Health amp Environment Retrieved 28 January 2019 Notice of intent to adopt rules with a hearing Proposed Rules Adopting Vehicle Greenhouse Gas Emissions Standards Clean Cars Minnesota PDF Minnesota Pollution Control Agency December 14 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Palmer Denig Judge Jessica A May 7 2021 In the Matter of Clean Cars Minnesota Rulemaking OAH 71 9003 36416 Revisor R 4626 PDF Report Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Retrieved 2 December 2021 Rulemaking Clean Cars Minnesota Minnesota Pollution Control Agency 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Budryk Zack 2022 08 29 Virginia AG says state bound by California rule phasing out new gas powered cars The Hill Retrieved 2022 08 29 Notice of final rulemaking PDF Arizona Department of Environmental Quality November 2011 Retrieved 28 January 2019 Petition to repeal regulations PDF State of New Mexico Environmental Improvement Board June 2013 Retrieved 28 January 2019 State Action Clean Cars Campaign Archived from the original on 29 January 2019 Retrieved 28 January 2019 Quebec adopts California car emissions standards CBC December 29 2009 Retrieved 28 January 2019 Memorandum of Understanding between the California Air Resourcese Board of the State of California and Environment and Climate Change Canada of the Government of Canada to Enhance Cooperation on Measures that Mitigate Greenhouse Gas Emissions PDF Environment and Climate Change Canada 26 June 2019 Retrieved 18 October 2019 California s Zero Emission Vehicle ZEV Program Union of Concerned Scientists 2009 01 30 Retrieved 2009 04 21 a b c Summary of Staff s Preliminary Assessment of the Need for Revisions to the Zero Emission Vehicle Regulation PDF Report California Air Resources Board November 25 2009 Retrieved 6 December 2018 Low Emission Vehicles LEV amp GHG 2012 California Air Resources Board January 26 2012 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Zero Emission Vehicles 2012 California Air Resources Board January 26 2012 Retrieved 2 December 2021 LEV III GHG and ZEV Regulation Amendments for Federal Compliance option California Air Resources Board November 15 2012 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Governor Newsom Announces California Will Phase Out Gasoline Powered Cars amp Drastically Reduce Demand for Fossil Fuel in California s Fight Against Climate Change Press release State of California Office of Governor Gavin Newsom September 23 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Newsom Gavin September 23 2020 Executive Order N 79 20 PDF State of California Office of Governor Gavin Newsom Retrieved 2 December 2021 Governor Newsom s Zero Emission by 2035 Executive Order N 79 20 California Air Resources Board January 19 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 a b c d e f California exhaust emission standards and test procedures for 2005 through 2008 model zero emission vehicles and 2001 through 2008 model hybrid electric vehicles in the passenger car light duty truck and medium duty vehicle classes PDF California Air Resources Board December 2 2009 Retrieved 10 December 2018 a b c Zero Emission Vehicle Legal and Regulatory Activities The ZEV Program Timeline California Air Resources Board 2011 10 14 Archived from the original on 2014 10 06 Retrieved 2014 09 22 Fact Sheet California Vehicle Emissions PDF California Air Resources Board 2004 04 08 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 04 11 Retrieved 2009 04 21 Sherry Boschert 2006 Plug in Hybrids The Cars that will Recharge America New Society Publishers Gabriola Island Canada pp 15 28 ISBN 978 0 86571 571 4 See the box Zero Emission Vehicle ZEV Mandate Timeline pp 23 28 Christine amp Scott Gable What is a ZEV Zero Emissions Vehicle About com Hybrid Cars amp Alt Fuels Archived from the original on 2011 10 25 Retrieved 2008 04 21 According to the LEV I regulations the LVW is defined as the sum of the vehicle s kerb weight and a 300 lb 140 kg allowance for the driver and fuel a b c Final Regulation Order Sections 1900 1960 1 and 1976 Title 13 CCR PDF California Air Resources Board March 28 1996 Retrieved 6 December 2018 a b c 1998 Zero emission vehicle biennial program review PDF Report California Air Resources Board July 6 1998 Retrieved 6 December 2018 Final Statement of Reasons for Rulemaking Including Summary of Comments and Agency Response PDF California Air Resources Board March 28 1996 Retrieved 6 December 2018 California Air Resources Board Votes to Modify ZEV Program in Short Term Complete Overhaul to Begin for New ZEV II Green Car Congress 2008 03 27 Retrieved 2009 04 21 Zero Emission Vehicle ZEV Program California Air Resources Board 2009 02 27 Retrieved 2009 04 21 California Air Resources Board ZEV Action Plan PDF Governor s Office of Business and Economic Development March 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Rory Carroll Alexandria Sage 2016 09 01 California s zero emission vehicle program is stuck in neutral Reuters Archived from the original on 2016 10 12 Retrieved 2017 07 26 Zero emission vehicle sales in the U S Reuters Advanced Clean Cars ACC II Workshop PDF California Air Resources Board September 16 2020 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Advanced Clean Cars ACC II Workshop PDF California Air Resources Board May 6 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Advanced Clean Cars ACC II Workshop PDF California Air Resources Board August 11 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Advanced Clean Cars ACC II Workshop PDF California Air Resources Board October 13 2021 Retrieved 2 December 2021 Green Elspeth Mar 22 2022 California HVIP reopens voucher program offering discounts for hybrid and zero emission vehicles ridewithvia com Retrieved 2022 11 02 About Us Hybrid and Zero Emission Truck and Bus Voucher Incentive Project California HVIP Retrieved 2022 11 02 OHV Registration ohv parks ca gov Retrieved 2023 01 09 Off highway Vehicle Registration DMV CA GOV Retrieved 2023 01 09 OHRV Red Sticker Program California air resources board Retrieved 2023 01 09 John McCoy 14 December 2022 New California Dirt Bike Laws For 2022 Dirt Legal Retrieved 2023 01 09 CHC Fact Sheet Ferries California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2024 02 15 CHC Fact Sheet Tugboats Towing Vessels California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2024 02 15 Commercial Harbor Craft California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2024 02 15 Industry concerns over CARB amendments spark emission compliance battle www workboat com Retrieved 2024 02 15 Low Carbon Fuel Standard Program California Air Resources Board 2009 04 14 Retrieved 2009 04 23 a b Proposed Regulation to Implement the Low Carbon Fuel Standard Volume I Staff Report Initial Statement of Reasons PDF California Air Resources Board 2009 03 05 Retrieved 2009 04 26 Wyatt Buchanan 2009 04 24 Air Resources Board moves to cut carbon use San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 2009 04 25 Young Samantha 2009 04 24 Calif Approves Nation s 1st Low Carbon Fuel Rule phys org The Associated Press Retrieved 2009 04 25 UNICA press release 2009 04 24 Sugarcane Ethanol Passes Critical Test in California World Wire Archived from the original on 2009 04 26 Retrieved 2009 04 25 California transitioning to all electric public bus fleet by 2040 Press release California Air Resources Board December 14 2018 Retrieved 3 January 2019 Final Regulation Order Title 13 California Code of Regulations Section 2023 PDF California Air Resources Board December 14 2018 Retrieved 3 January 2019 Electric Bus Fleet Conversion Antelope Valley Transit Authority Retrieved 3 January 2019 California Certified Air Cleaning Devices From California Air Resources Board California Air Resources Board breaks ground on world class lab headquarters in Riverside California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2021 11 19 CARB dedicates new Southern California headquarters in Riverside California Air Resources Board ww2 arb ca gov Retrieved 2021 11 19 External links editOfficial website Title 13 Motor Vehicles Division 3 regulations in the California Code of Regulations CCR from Westlaw Title 17 Public Health Division 3 regulations in the CCR from Westlaw CARB s Low Emission Vehicle Regulations and Test Procedures CARB web site page on Climate Change CARB s Diesel Emission Control Strategies VerificationNewsCalifornia charts course to fight global warming California s greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent over the next 12 years California air board announces plan for carbon credit trading Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title California Air Resources Board amp oldid 1207885066, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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