WASHINGTON — Major freight railroads and their short-line counterparts raised red flags on Capitol Hill about supply chain consequences of a California regulation aimed at cutting air pollution from locomotives.
If the California Air Resources Board is successful in securing approval from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, California’s In-Use Locomotive Regulation, adopted by the state last year, would require all locomotives manufactured after 2035 that travel though the state of California be zero-emission – effectively banning the operation in California of locomotives that are more than 23 years old, based on the original manufacture date, the railroads asserted.
Because close to 70% of the Class I locomotive fleet moves in and out of California in any given year, “the rule dramatically increases the cost of providing rail transportation, and most likely shifts a lot of freight onto the highway,” said Ian Jefferies, president and CEO of the Association of American Railroads, testifying before the oversight subcommittee of the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee on Thursday.
“That makes our customers pay more, consumers pay more, and it adds stress to the public infrastructure by pushing more trucks onto the highways, increasing congestion.”
Chuck Baker, president of the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association, added that if short lines are driven out of business due to the costs imposed by CARB’s rule, “businesses that have lost shipping options will move out of California or just vanish,” he said. “Millions of additional trucks would be forced onto the road, increasing congestion, crashes, deaths, and taxes for road maintenance.”
In addition to compliance timelines for both yard-switching and line-haul locomotives, the rules limit locomotive idling to 30 minutes except for certain circumstances, such as maintaining air brake pressure or providing heat or cooling to the locomotive cab. They require locomotives operating in the state to register with CARB and annually report on their activity, emission levels and idling data.
The railroads also argued that, aside from costs and supply chain disruptions, it’s not operationally feasible to transition to electric locomotives on a large scale in the time frame required by the regulation.
Their arguments were countered by Alan Abbs, legislative officer for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, based in San Francisco.
The regulation, Abbs said, “calls for a steady reduction of emissions over the next 30 years, allowing for existing technologies to be used, while new and more advanced zero-emission technologies are developed.” He also said such locomotives are available for purchase today.
“Zero-emission rail transportation is nothing new. Electrified rail is more than 100 years old and is widely used around the world, nearly every locomotive operating today runs on fully electric motors which can be powered other than using diesel generators.”
Abbs also pointed out that despite industry warnings about costs, unachievable timelines, and lost business, those fears have not materialized as California has tightened its environmental laws.
“We would be the fifth largest power house if we were a country, and we’ve done that by making the state cleaner,” he said.
Ernest Garcia
Good, than the trucking industry will pick up and hopefully be able to charge a higher rate per mile to haul
Richard Taylor
A basic engine needs 25 megawatt to function, pending its load…and up to 110 megawatt for acceleration, climbing, load. 25 megawatt powers 25,000 homes…. so where is all that power going to come from and how does it get there. California is out to lunch…and I live there.
Keith
How did we let 16 members of C.A.R.B. decide the future of MILLIONS of CA. Residents?????
Ray H
They can’t build a railroad so now they are telling others how to run theirs!!!! This would be crazy expensive for the railroads, and not really realistic, most trains have 3 or 4 locomotives making 4400hp, and they run full load for hours on end to get over the Sierra’s…what the state is mandating would require special locomotives (that no one currently makes) .and an insane amount of electricity to equate to and you can’t battery that kind of power, so how many miles of copper wire are we going to run..ohh and how many environmental impact study’s are they going to have to do… Just another California graft operation, just like the high speed rail, massive no build green zones that force commuter traffic/ pollution and crazy building standards for houses..
Victor
Yet again, how are they going to come up with all the electricity needed to run these zero emissions locomotives? California faces brown outs regularly now. Adding all these EVs is going to make the problem worse, not better.
Don P
Quit shipping to CA, stack the cars up at the border and let them figure out how to haul across their 2 lane interstates.
Give them what they deserve
Robert Braxton
What’s wrong with California? Everytime a person opens thier mouth, theirsgonna be emissions. These demands are unrealistic, archaic, just the ev goals.
Stephen Webster
Simple put hydrogen locomotives at the California line or at least for all switches in the Urban areas
Also look at natural gas and hudge batteries rail cars.
If the railroad would put electric batteries cars next to switch engines that could change evey 5 hrs
The California gov would be willing to back down along with 3 and 2 person crews in Urban areas in my opinion.