Question of the Month:
What
are the requirements for state and alternative fuel provider fleets
under the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (EPAct 1992) and subsequent
regulations and directives?
Answer:
EPAct
1992 mandates that certain state government and alternative fuel
provider fleets in the United States acquire specified percentages of
alternative fuel vehicles
(AFVs) on an annual basis as they add light-duty vehicles (LDVs) to
their fleets. Below we have described a number of means beyond simply
acquiring AFVs by which these fleets may achieve compliance.
The
U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) is responsible for overseeing
compliance with these requirements, which were promulgated and published
at 10 CFR Part 490 as
the Alternative Fuel Transportation Program. Information about state
and alternative fuel provider “covered fleets” (fleets subject to EPAct
1992 requirements) and the requirements associated with this compliance
program are outlined below for each fleet type.
State Fleets
Covered Fleets
State government (including state agency and state university) fleets are considered covered fleets if
all of the following conditions are met:
·
They
own, operate, lease, or otherwise control 50 or more light-duty
vehicles (LDVs; vehicles with a gross vehicle weight rating of 8,500
pounds or less)
within the United States and are not on the list of excluded vehicles.
Excluded vehicles include emergency, law enforcement, and non-road
vehicles;
·
At
least 20 of those vehicles are used primarily within a single
metropolitan statistical area (MSA)/consolidated MSA (CMSA), based on
1980 census data.
A list of covered MSA/CMSAs can be found online:
https://www.afdc.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/state/ progs/dyn_msa.cgi; and
·
Those
same 20 vehicles are centrally fueled or capable of being centrally
fueled, meaning they are capable of being fueled at least 75% of the
time at
a location that is owned, operated, or controlled by the fleet or is
under contract with that fleet for fueling purposes.
The following resources may be used to determine whether a state fleet is covered:
·
Decision Tree for State Government Fleets:
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/state_ decision_tree.html
·
State Government Fleet Compliance with the Energy Policy Act of 1992: Self-Audit Procedures:
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/pdfs/ selfaudit_procedures.pdf
Requirement
Like
federal fleets regulated under EPAct 1992, a covered state fleet must
acquire in a model year the number of AFVs that is equal to at
least 75% of the fleet’s non-excluded LDV acquisitions.
Compliance Methods
Covered state fleets may meet their requirements using multiple means through one of two compliance methods:
·
Standard Compliance:
Fleets can acquire the requisite number
of new or used AFVs, convert conventional vehicles to run on an
alternative fuel within four months of acquisition, or obtain AFV
credits from other covered fleets. Covered fleets earn one credit for
each light-duty AFV that is acquired beyond the fleet’s
annual requirement for the model year. Credits earned by going beyond
compliance are banked for future use. Credits may also be traded with
other fleets. Covered fleets may also meet up to 50% of their
AFV-acquisition requirements by purchasing
biodiesel blends of
at least
B20 for use in medium- and heavy-duty vehicles. One
credit toward compliance is earned for every 450 gallons of neat
biodiesel (B100) or every 2,250 gallons of B20 purchased for use.
Credits earned for biodiesel purchase for use may not be banked.
In addition, a fleet may earn credits for its medium- and heavy-duty
AFV acquisitions, but only after the fleet has met its light-duty AFV
acquisition requirements.
·
Alternative Compliance:
Covered fleets may obtain a waiver from
the AFV acquisition requirements of Standard Compliance by submitting
and then implementing a DOE- approved plan to reduce the fleet’s annual
petroleum consumption. The plan must result in petroleum reductions
equal to what the fleet would have achieved if
all its AFVs were running on alternative fuel all the time. The plan
must also include a sufficient level of data and information to support
the fleet’s compliance requirements, particularly information on fuel
use. Alternative Compliance petroleum reduction
methods include, among others, hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) use,
alternative fuel use, reduction in vehicle miles traveled, idle-time
reduction, and truck stop electrification.
For a summary of compliance methods, visit the following website:
http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/ compliance_methods.html.
Inclusion of Hybrid Electric and Plug-in Electric Vehicles
Currently, all-electric vehicles (EVs) and some plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) qualify as AFVs under Standard Compliance. DOE published a notice of proposed rulemaking in October 2011, pursuant to Section 133 of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, that would allocate AFV credits for covered fleet acquisitions of the following vehicles:
Currently, all-electric vehicles (EVs) and some plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) qualify as AFVs under Standard Compliance. DOE published a notice of proposed rulemaking in October 2011, pursuant to Section 133 of the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, that would allocate AFV credits for covered fleet acquisitions of the following vehicles:
·
HEVs would receive one-half credit
·
PHEVs (those that do not already meet the definition of an AFV) would receive one-half credit
·
Fuel cell electric vehicles (those that do not already meet the definition of an AFV) would receive one-half credit
·
Neighborhood electric vehicles would receive one-fourth credit
For more information on this proposed rulemaking, please see the proposed rule fact sheet (http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/pdfs/ section_133_proposed_rule.pdf)
and the full notice (http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/ FR-2011-10-31/pdf/2011-26761. pdf).
Alternative Fuel Provider Fleets
Covered Fleets
A covered alternative fuel provider is any entity that meets
one of the following conditions:
·
The
entity’s principle business involves producing, storing, refining,
processing, transporting, distributing, importing, or selling any
alternative fuel
(other than electricity);
·
The entity’s principle business involves generating, transmitting, importing, or selling electricity at wholesale or retail; or
·
The
entity produces, imports, or produces and imports in combination, an
average of 50,000 barrels per day or more of petroleum, and 30% or more
of its
gross annual revenues are derived from producing alternative fuels.
An alternative fuel provider is
not covered if its principal business involves:
- Transforming alternative fuels into products that are not alternative fuels; or
- Using alternative fuel as a feedstock, or fuel, in the manufacturing of products that are not alternative fuels.
In
addition to meeting this definition, alternative fuel provider fleets
are also subject to the same conditions for inclusion as state fleets
(see above). For example, if a fleet does not own, operate, lease, or
otherwise control at least 50 non-excluded LDVs, then it is not
considered a covered fleet.
The Decision Tree for Alternative Fuel Provider Fleets (http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/alt_ decision_tree.html)
may be used to determine whether an alternative fuel provider fleet is covered.
Requirement
A
covered alternative fuel provider fleet must acquire in a model year
the number of AFVs that is equal to at least 90% of the fleet’s
non-excluded
LDV acquisitions.
Compliance Methods
Covered alternative fuel provider fleets have the same options for achieving compliance as state fleets.
* * *
Additional
information on state and alternative fuel provider requirements and
compliance options, as well the annual reporting requirements,
may be found on DOE’s EPAct Transportation Regulatory Activities
website (http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ vehiclesandfuels/epact/index. html).
In addition, the online Clean Cities University course on Understanding EPAct-Regulated Fleets (http://www1.eere.energy.gov/ cleancities/toolbox/ university.html)
provides an overview of state and alternative fuel provider requirements.
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