| Home | Public Notices | Staff Directory | Contact DAQ | Search |
| News & Public Outreach >> Press Releases | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beverly Eaves Perdue, Governor | ![]() |
Dee Freeman, Secretary |
N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources |
||
|---|---|---|
| Release: Immediate Date: August 11, 2009 |
Contact: Tom Mather (919) 715-7408 Distribution: Statewide |
|
RALEIGH - State environmental officials have awarded nearly $1.2 million in grants for 24 projects aimed at reducing air pollution from diesel-powered vehicles, equipment and ships, with funds provided under the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA) of 2009. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency allocated ARRA funding to the states as part of the national economic stimulus plan, and the N.C. Division of Air Quality coordinated the grants program in North Carolina. The grants cover a range of projects, such as retrofitting school buses with controls to curb diesel emissions, repowering trucks and ships with cleaner-burning engines, and offsetting costs for using biodiesel fuel. A complete list of project recipients, locations and amounts of grants is attached. The ARRA funds are directed at older vehicles and equipment with diesel engines, which often lack the most up-to-date air pollution controls. Older diesel engines contribute significantly to air pollution in North Carolina and other states. "North Carolina has a number of efforts underway to reduce ozone and particle-forming emissions from industry, power plants and gasoline-powered highway vehicles," DAQ Director Keith Overcash said. "These grants will target diesel buses, trucks, ships and equipment that lack modern emissions controls." Mobile sources such as cars, trucks, ships and construction equipment contribute about 69 percent of the nitrogen oxides (NOx), 63 percent of the man-made volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and 8 percent of the direct fine-particle emissions (PM 2.5) in North Carolina. NOx and VOCs are the main contributors to ozone, which is unhealthy to breathe and is the state's most widespread air quality problem in the summer months. Particle pollution is unhealthy to breathe and contributes to haze. For further information on the ARRA diesel emissions reductions project funds, visit the Division of Air Quality Web site at: http://www.daq.state.nc.us/motor/NCDEER/. For further information on economic recovery funding for environmental efforts, please visit http://portal.ncdenr.org/web/arra/home.
Motor Vehicles
Ships and Marine Equipment
|
| N.C. Division of Air Quality B. Keith Overcash, Director 1641 Mail Service Center, Raleigh, NC 27699-1641 |
Tom Mather, Public Information Officer (919)715-7408, FAX (919)715-7175 tom.mather@ncdenr.gov |
| Last Modified: Tue August 11 09:55:50 2009
|
Top of Page |
| North Carolina Division of Air Quality - 1641 Mail Service Center - Raleigh, NC 27699-1641 - (919) 707-8400 |