OVERVIEW
Over four million
heavy-duty commercial trucks a year enter the United States from
Mexico at various ports along the border states of California,
Arizona, New Mexico and Texas. More than 250,000 trucks enter
through the Mariposa-Nogales border crossing in Arizona alone. The
most recent scientific research shows that high-volume truck
traffic is creating severe air pollution problems for people who
live in communities along the congested Mexico-US border. As the US
prepares to fully implement the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA), truck traffic is expected to increase, compounding the
existing air pollution problem.
GOALS
The project will help state and federal officials determine:
1) how many trucks crossing the border exceed the EPA’s new
standards for fine particle diesel emissions;
2) how much pollution these trucks are emitting into the air;
3) emissions standards for a potential heavy-duty commercial truck
inspection program;
4) the feasibility and benefits of a “gross-emitter”
program that reduces harmful diesel exhaust by identifying
polluting trucks.
PROJECT PARTNERS
ESP’s partners in the project include the U.S Environmental Protection Agency, Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, Customs and Border Protection and M.J. Bradley & Associates.
Remote sensing technology represents an advanced tool for air quality managers, allowing them to identify high-emitting vehicles at congested border crossings without interrupting the nation’s important flow of commerce.
BACKGROUND
Commercial carriers crossing into the US from Mexico through the Mariposa-Nogales port are primarily transporting agricultural products. Agricultural trade surges in the winter, with a peak volume of 1,400 incoming trucks per day.
Heavy duty vehicles and their big diesel engines are major sources of soot. According to the American Lung Association, diesel engines generate 100 times more sooty particles than gasoline engines. In fact, diesel engines create 26 percent of all hazardous particle pollution and 66 percent of the particle pollution from on-road sources,according to the ALA. Diesel exhaust emissions contributeto ground-level ozone (smog),fine particulate pollution, and air toxics, which are believed to cause cancer in humans.
The testing will also help authorities understand how the increased truck traffic will impact air quality, public health and the environment. By identifying the source of harmful emissions and measuring the contribution from diesel trucks, policy makers can shape their efforts to reduce pollution in a more cost-effective manner.
Information gained from the cross-border project will eventually enable states to develop heavy-duty diesel emission reduction programs. These programs will help officials meet the EPA’s new standards for diesel soot emissions, and benefit public health by improving air quality.
The pilot project will measure diesel exhaust from commercial
trucks crossing the border at the MariposaNogales Port of Entry.
Emissions of carbon monoxide (CO), Hydrocarbons (HC), Nitrogen
Oxides (NOx), and fine particulate matter (PM) will be estimated.
Several technologies will be in use, including: Heavy-Duty Remote
Sensing Devices (HDRSDs), portable emissions monitors (PEMs), and
opacimeters. HDRSD equipment will be the only emissions measurement
device able to analyze nearly all
trucks passing through the border.