Diesel Exhaust Emissions

About

Nationally, US EPA is working to reduce diesel exhaust emissions from many types of sources. These emissions are being reduced in WV through partnerships with our sister agencies to help protect our environment at schools, via public transit, and on our highways.

Funding Opportunities

State Laws

  • WV Code 17C-13A

    The Diesel-Powered Motor Vehicle Idling Act (West Virginia Code §17C-13A) limits regulated entities to no more than 15 minutes of idling per one-hour period, but does contain a number of exceptions including for public safety. This anti-idling statute is enforceable by a law enforcement officer defined by code (such as local police, county sheriffs and state police); these do not include West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection personnel.

Documents and Brochures

  • National Idling Reduction Network News

    Newsletter with information on idling reduction regulations, idling reduction grants, idling reduction general news, summary of state ani-idling regulations, and upcoming meetings and events.

  • US Dept. of Energy: GREET Fleet Footprint Calculator

    “What is the GREET Fleet Footprint Calculator?” by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Clean Cities Program is a factsheet to walk fleet managers through the GREET Fleet tool. It describes what the tool measures, why fleets may want to use the tool, and the steps users take to enter their information into the tool.

  • WV Division of Air Quality Clean Air Forum Brochure

    Learn about alternative and renewable energy, electric utility net metering, household solar PV systems, geothermal heating, hydrogen as a fuel, and more.

Clean Diesel Grants

Overview

As part of US EPA’s National Clean Diesel Campaign, WVDEP’s Division of Air Quality has participated in several projects to help reduce diesel emissions in our state. These projects have been accomplished through partnerships with the WV Division of Public Transit, the WV Division of Highways, local transit authorities and county school systems.  

Clean Diesel Projects

  • Off-set the cost of new technology to bring the first hybrid electric diesel transit buses to the state. These seven buses now operate in the Charleston and Huntington areas as part of the Kanawha Valley Regional Transit Authority and The Tri-State Transit Authority’s fleets. 

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for ten on-road single-axle diesel dump trucks with new, cleaner trucks within the Division of Highways fleet. These dump trucks will be used across the state. To ensure that the older model trucks could no longer be used for transportation activities, the Division of Highways drilled holes in the engine block and engine manifold of each truck, as well as cut each chassis in half prior to sale at auction for scrap andd parts. 

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for five school buses in Greenbrier County with new, cleaner buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards. To ensure that the older buses could no longer be used for transportation activities, each bus was taken down to scrap and sold for recycle value. 

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for four school buses in Fayette County with new, cleaner buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards. To ensure that the older buses could no longer be used for transportation activities, each bus was taken down to scrap and sold for recycle value. 

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for six on-road double-axle diesel dump trucks with new, cleaner trucks within the Division of Highways fleet. Five dump trucks will be used primarily in Kanawha County and one primarily in Greenbrier County. To ensure that the older model trucks could no longer be used for transportation activities, the Division of Highways drilled holes in the engine block of each truck, as well as cut each chassis in half prior to sale at auction for scrap and parts. 

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for five school buses in Cabell County with new, cleaner buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards. To ensure that the older buses could no longer be used for transportation activities, holes were drilled into the engine block as well as each chassis was cut in half. Four of the older buses were taken down to scrap and sold for recycle value. One was donated to allow fire departments from around Cabell County to train on extrication procedures involving a school bus.  

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for three on-road double-axle diesel dump trucks with new, cleaner trucks and Idle Reduction Technology within the Division of Highways fleet. The three dump trucks will be used primarily in Harrison, Marshall, and Raleigh Counties. To ensure that the older model trucks could no longer be used for transportation activities, the Division of Highways drilled holes in the engine block of each truck, as well as cut each chassis in half prior to sale for scrappage.  

  • Partially off-set replacement costs for four school buses in Monongalia County with new, cleaner buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards. To ensure that the older buses could no longer be used for transportation activities, holes were drilled into the engine block as well as each chassis was cut in half. The scrapped buses were donated to Monongalia County Fire Association and Monongalia Emergency Services to train on extrication procedures involving a school bus.  

Apply for Grant Funding

Eligible entities may apply directly to US EPA for competitive grant funding for clean diesel projects. To find out more, please visit the US EPA’s Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) Funding website.  

 
 
 
 

Gallery

Hybid Bus
One of seven new hybrid buses
 
 
Hybid Bus
One of seven new hybrid buses
 
 
Dump Truck with Snow Plow
Dump truck with snow plow
 
 
Yellow school bus with childern boarding
One of five cleaner school buses in Greenbrier County.
 
 
Parked fleet of new yellow school buses
Five Greenbrier County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards.
 
 
Four new yellow school buses
New school buses for Greenbrier County.
 
 
New WVDOT trucks meeting higher EPA emission standards.
New WVDOT trucks meeting higher EPA emission standards.
 
 
Five Cabell County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards
Five Cabell County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards
 
 
Three WV DOT dump trucks parked beside a road
Three new WVDOT trucks meeting higher EPA emission standards with Idle Reduction Technology
 
 
Four Monongalia County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards
Four Monongalia County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards
 
 
Seven of eight Monongalia County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards
Seven of eight Monongalia County school buses meeting EPA's latest emission control standards
 
 
One Kanawha County electric school bus with zero tailpipe emissions
One Kanawha County electric school bus with zero tailpipe emissions
 
 
 

Idle-Free School Zones

Please feel free to use this information and all the resources on this webpage. Please note that we are no longer providing Idle Free Zone signs.  

 
 

Nationally, the U.S. EPA is working to reduce diesel exhaust emissions from many types of sources. One way these emissions are being reduced in WV is through the efforts of schools to help protect our environment. The “Idle Free Zone” sign project promotes cleaner air and fuel savings for school bus drivers, parents and delivery vehicles at West Virginia's schools.  

 
 

Resources

  • Map of Idle Free Zones

    An image of WV counties show all counties except Randolph county have had signs distributed to the entire county 

  • Idling Brochure

    Brochure describing how limiting school bus engine idling protects both indoor and outdoor air quality, saves money in fuel costs, reduces engine wear, and creates a healthier environment.  

  • Receipt Locations

    Suggestions on placing your Idle Free Zone sign.  

 
 
 

Idle-Free School Zone Photos

Kanawha City Elementary, Kanawha Co.
Kanawha City Elementary, Kanawha Co.
 
 
Scott High School, Boone Co.
Scott High School, Boone Co.
 
 
Riverside High School, Kanawha Co.
Riverside High School, Kanawha Co.
 
 
 
Bridgeport High School, Harrison Co.
Bridgeport High School, Harrison Co.
 
 
Meadows Elementary, Cabell Co.
Meadows Elementary, Cabell Co.
 
 
Altizer Elementary Schoo, Cabell Co.
Altizer Elementary Schoo, Cabell Co.
 
 
 
Madison Elementary School, Boone Co.
Madison Elementary School, Boone Co.
 
 
Huntington Middle School, Cabell Co.
Huntington Middle School, Cabell Co.
 
 
Chamberlain Elementary School, Kanawha Co.
Chamberlain Elementary School, Kanawha Co.
 
 
 
South Charleston Middle School, Kanawha Co.
South Charleston Middle School, Kanawha Co.
 
 
Boone County Elementary, Boone Co.
Boone County Elementary, Boone Co.
 
 
Vinson Middle School, Boone Co.
Vinson Middle School, Boone Co.
 
 
 

School Bus Dies​el Engine Retrofit Project

Berkeley and Jefferson County Boards of Education

School Bus Logo

Introduction and Background

Berkeley and Jefferson County Boards of Education committed to retrofitting school buses with diesel oxidation catalysts (DOCs), devices that reduce emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), carbon monoxide (CO), fine particulate matter, and diesel exhaust. The Division of Air Quality (DAQ) began working with the schools in July 2003 to obtain funding for the project and assess fleet eligibility. The DAQ developed a grant program to enable up to $150,000.00 from a penalty settlement to be used for these West Virginia schools to retrofit their buses to reduce diesel particulate matter, a likely human carcinogen.  

Berkeley and Jefferson County Boards of Education committed to retrofitting school buses with diesel oxidation catalysts (DOCs), devices that reduce emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOCs), carbon monoxide (CO), fine particulate matter, and diesel exhaust. The Division of Air Quality (DAQ) began working with the schools in July 2003 to obtain funding for the project and assess fleet eligibility. The DAQ developed a grant program to enable up to $150,000.00 from a penalty settlement to be used for these West Virginia schools to retrofit their buses to reduce diesel particulate matter, a likely human carcinogen.  

This is a voluntary project that the schools undertook above and beyond their typical responsibilities. Both schools have worked cooperatively with one another as well as with the Division of Air Quality to enable this project to succeed. Berkeley and Jefferson County Schools were awarded WVDEP’s 2004 Environmental Stewardship Award for their voluntary efforts to make one of the safest forms of ground transportation even safer. By the end of 2004, 100 school buses had been retrofitted with DOCs.  

Diesel engines are very reliable and it is not uncommon for them to be in use for 20-30 years. Thus, retrofitting school bus fleets with DOCs will result in emissions reductions sooner than would otherwise occur through fleet turnover. DOCs were chosen as the method of diesel engine retrofit for Jefferson and Berkeley Counties due to ease of installation, relatively low cost, and ability to reduce not only diesel exhaust emissions, but VOCs and CO as well. The DOCs are muffler replacements on the exhaust systems of the buses.  

Grant agreements between the agency and each of the school systems were signed in May 2004. The schools issued a combined request for bids to enable bulk rate discounts from vendors of verified US EPA retrofit technology. Then the schools issued purchase orders for the DOCs and began installing them in phases.  

This project is the first of its kind in the state. US EPA is spearheading a national campaign to reduce diesel exhaust emissions, including the Clean School Bus USA program. The experience DAQ gained from assisting Jefferson and Berkeley Counties in retrofitting these school bus fleets with DOCs will benefit other school districts in West Virginia (WV) when they are ready to participate in such projects, thus reducing the exposure of school children and other sensitive populations to the unhealthy effects of poor air quality.  

Additionally, the school bus diesel engine retrofit project is one of the primary voluntary measures being undertaken to demonstrate to US EPA that the Eastern Panhandle region of the state is expeditiously working to reduce ozone precursors that contribute to ground level ozone formation in Jefferson and Berkeley counties. These pollutant reductions will aid in the implementation of a strategy developed by the Early Action Compact (EAC) for the Eastern Panhandle Region of West Virginia to ensure local attainment of federal air quality standards.  

Objectives

By implementing diesel engine retrofit measures in Jefferson and Berkeley counties, three main objectives are being met: air quality in WV’s Eastern Panhandle region will be improved; the school bus engine fleets will be cleaner without having to replace existing buses; and school children will be exposed to reduced amounts of diesel engine exhaust.  

  • Improve Air Quality in West Virginia’s Eastern Panhandle

    A reduction of diesel exhaust emissions as well as the ozone precursor of hydrocarbons (HC), including volatile organic compounds (VOCs), can be achieved by implementing diesel engine retrofit measures on school buses in Berkeley and Jefferson Counties. By reducing pollutants that contribute to ground level ozone formation, this diesel retrofit technology project will be aiding in the implementation of a strategy to assist the Eastern Panhandle region in ensuring attainment of air quality standards set by US EPA. Maintenance of attainment status of this geographic area will encourage economic development by increasing the manufacturing flexibility of local industries, as well as enhancing the possibility of new business growth.  

    The reduction of diesel particulate not only reduces exposure of children and bus drivers to this pollutant of concern, but reduces exposure to carbon monoxide (CO) and PM fines as well.  

  • Clean Up School Bus Diesel Engine Fleet

    There are approximately 221 school buses with diesel engines in active service in Berkeley and Jefferson Counties. By outfitting eligible older buses in these fleets with DOCs, overall emissions to the atmosphere can be reduced in advance of fleet turnover.  

  • Protect Children from Diesel Engine Exhaust

    US EPA has concluded that diesel engine exhaust is likely to pose serious respiratory problems to humans, as well as damage the lung in other ways, depending on exposure. Additionally, short term exposure to diesel engine exhaust can cause temporary irritation and inflammatory symptoms in some members of the population. According to US EPA, children are more susceptible to air pollution than healthy adults because their respiratory systems are still developing, and they have a faster breathing rate. Thus, reducing exposure of school children to diesel exhaust emissions can help alleviate potential unhealthy effects.  

    Diesel exhaust contains large amounts of small particles known as fine particulate matter. “Fine particles pose a significant health risk because they can pass through the nose and throat and lodge themselves in the lungs. These fine particles can cause lung damage and premature death. They can also aggravate conditions such as asthma and bronchitis”.  

    In WV an estimated 32,000 children suffer from asthma based on WV Department of Health and Human Resources (WVDHHR) data. This data also show that asthma is the number one cause of school absences attributed to chronic conditions. Reducing diesel exhaust emissions should help to reduce some of the factors potentially causing asthma attacks.  

Assessment

There are approximately 221 school buses with diesel engines in active service in Berkeley and Jefferson Counties. With rapid population growth in the Eastern Panhandle region of WV, these counties are struggling to provide enough buses to transport students; therefore some buses are older than the 12-year life span suggested by a WV Department of Education policy. Older buses are typically used as spares (back-ups), while the newest and cleanest buses are put into regular service. Berkeley County Schools transports approximately 13,000 students to 26 schools, and Jefferson County Schools transports approximately 7,500 students to 14 schools.  

Ideal Retrofit Candidates

For the purposes of this project, ideal retrofit candidates were buses in active service with 1997 or newer engines and with at least five years of regular service remaining. Such buses are currently 6 years old and are expected to have at least another 6 years in active service, followed by possible continued use as spares.  

Photo Gallery

Additional Resources

Additional Resources

  • Argonne National Laboratory: Center for Transportation Research

    Argonne’s Center for Transportation Research (CTR) provides innovative solutions to challenges involving fuel efficiency, emissions, durability, safety, design and operating efficiency, petroleum dependence, interoperability, compatibility and codes/standards compliance and harmonization. The CTR is home to a well-balanced transportation research program staffed by world-class researchers and engineers, who are well known in the technical community and within industry, and are supported by the finest experimental facilities and high-performance computer modeling capabilities. 

  • EPA: Clean Diesel Technology

    Reducing exposure to diesel exhaust from diesel engines is especially important for human health and the environment. EPA offers funding for projects that reduce diesel emissions from existing engines. 

  • EPA: Making School Buses Cleaner

    Older buses are excellent candidates for replacement with newer, cleaner vehicles which will greatly reduce children’s exposure to diesel exhaust and provide considerable safety improvements. To see if there is a school bus replacement or retrofit rebate currently available, please visit DERA School Bus Rebates

  • EPA: Reducing Diesel Emissions from School Buses

    EPA offers funding, as appropriated annually by Congress, for projects that reduce emissions from existing diesel engines. EPA also provides information on strategies for reducing emissions from older school buses. One of the easiest ways to reduce school bus emissions and save money is to reduce idling. Another effective method is to replace the oldest school buses in the fleet. 

  • EPA: Transportation, Air Pollution, and Climate Change

    Learn about pollutants from vehicles and engines that cause harmful health effects and climate change.  

  • Mid-Atlantic Diesel Collaborative

    The Mid-Atlantic Diesel Collaborative (MDC) is a partnership between leaders from federal, state, and local government, the private sector, and environmental groups in Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and the District of Columbia. The Collaborative is part of an overall national campaign to reduce diesel emissions. 

  • National Biodiesel Board

    The National Biodiesel Board (NBB) partners with Brownfield Ag News to deliver farmer-focused radio segments to 294 stations across the Midwest. We invite you to listen in to these interviews with farmer leaders covering all the biodiesel and renewable diesel industry has to offer including environmental benefits, the industry’s mission and vision, feedstock production and growth, technical advancements and so much more. 

  • Office of Energey Efficiency & Renewable Energy

    Last year, vehicles transported 11 billion tons of freight, more than $32 billion worth of goods each day, and moved people more than 3 trillion vehicle-miles. The U.S. Department of Energy's Vehicle Technologies Office provides low cost, secure, and clean energy technologies to move people and goods across America. 

  • US Dept. of Energy: IdleBox: A Toolkit for Idle Reduction Education and Outreach

    IdleBox is an electronic education and outreach toolkit on vehicle idle reduction. The low-hanging fruit of fuel economy, idle reduction is a simple way to use less fuel and minimize engine wear, reducing costs along with pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. 

  • West Virginia University's National Alternative Fuels Training Consortium (NAFTC)

    The National Alternative Fuels Training Consortium (NAFTC) is a pioneer and national leader in developing, managing, and promoting programs to help improve our nation’s energy independence and encourage the use of cleaner transportation. The NAFTC is the only nationwide alternative fuel vehicle training organization in the United States.