Final Rule for Control of Air Pollution from New Motor Vehicles: Heavy-Duty Engine and Vehicle Standards and Highway Diesel Fuel Sulfur Control Requirements
On this page:
Rule Summary
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is establishing a comprehensive national control program that will regulate the heavyduty vehicle and its fuel as a single system. As part of this program, new emission standards will begin to take effect in model year 2007 and will apply to heavy-duty highway engines and vehicles. These standards are based on the use of high-efficiency catalytic exhaust emission control devices or comparably effective advanced technologies. Because these devices are damaged by sulfur, we are also reducing the level of sulfur in highway diesel fuel by 97 percent by mid-2006. The program provides substantial flexibility for refiners, especially small refiners, and for manufacturers of engines and vehicles, to aid them in implementing the new requirements in the most cost-efficient manner.
- Final Rule (PDF)(193 pp, 2.1 MB, published January 18, 2001)
- Regulatory Impact Analysis (PDF)(824 pp, 2.4 MB, EPA-420-R-00-026, published December 2000)
- Response to Comments (PDF)(706 pp, 1.89 MB, EPA-420-R-00-027, December 2000)
Rule History
Additional Resources
Fact Sheet
- Heavy-Duty Engine and Vehicle Standards and Highway Diesel Fuel Sulfur Control Requirements (PDF)(4 pp, 78 K, EPA-420-F-00-057, December 2000)
Technical Support Document
- Heavy-Duty Engine and Vehicle Standards and Highway Diesel Fuel Sulfur Control Requirements: Air Quality Modeling Analyses (PDF)(107 pp, 320 K, EPA-420-R-00-028, December 2000)