EPA Accepting Applications For Grants To Reduce Diesel Emissions From School Buses
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Thursday announced it is accepting applications for approximately $7 million in rebates to public school bus fleet owners to help them replace or retrofit older school buses. Applications are due November 1. Upgrading buses with older engines reduces diesel emissions and improves air quality. "Modernizing school bus fleets across the country with retrofits, replacements, and idle reduction practices helps reduce children’s exposure to air toxics,” said Janet McCabe, acting assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Air and Radiation. “With the amount of time kids spend on buses, we need to protect them from the harm older diesel engines can cause.” EPA standards for new diesel engines make them more than 90 percent cleaner than older ones, but many older diesel engines still in operation predate these standards. Older diesel engines emit large quantities of pollutants such as particulate matter (PM) and nitrogen oxides (NOx), which have been linked to serious health problems such as aggravated asthma and lung damage. This is the fourth rebate program to fund cleaner school buses offered under the Diesel Emission Reduction Act reauthorization. Nearly 25,000 buses across the country have already been made cleaner as a result of DERA funding. Click Here for all the details. Questions about applying may be directed by email to: CleanDieselRebate@epa.gov. (Photo: Derry Township, Dauphin County, school bus.) NewsClips: No Permit? No Problem For Air Polluters Around Pittsburgh Glatfelter Among Worst Air Polluters |
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10/3/2016 |
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