Press release

U.S. low-sulfur fuels

U.S. state and local authorities are required to meet federal health-based air-quality standards for ozone, particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide, and sulfur dioxide. Cars and trucks are key sources of all these pollutants, and fuel composition is a key factor in vehicle emissions. Hence the National Association of Clean Air Agencies‘ strong interest in federal fuel quality standards.

Yesterday the NACCA released a report on the costs and health and environmental benefits of lowering the sulfur standard for gasoline in the U.S. to 10 ppm from the present 30 ppm and making other changes in how sulfur content is measured. Low-sulfur fuel contributes to cleaner vehicle emissions both directly and indirectly, by making it possible to use more advanced emission control devices.

The NACAA report is based in part on an economic analysis conducted by MathPro for the ICCT, and ICCT chair Michael Walsh provided expert assistance to the report authors.

News coverage:

E&E Daily, “States, carmakers press EPA to clear smog with gasoline standards

Politico — “Report: A penny for your ozone reductions?”

Fuels
Privacy Overview
International Council on Clean Transportation

This website uses cookies to enable some basic functionality and also to help us understand how visitors use the site, so that we can improve it.

Essential Cookies

Essential cookies provide basic core functionality, such as saving user preferences. You can disable these cookies in your browser settings.

Analytics

We use Google Analytics to collect anonymous information about how visitors interact with this website and the information we provide here, so that we can improve both over the long run. For more on how we use this information please see our privacy policy.