Pollution and Waste Treatment Solutions for Environmental Professionals
June 1, 2007
A long-term study continues to validate the effectiveness of Georgia's vehicle emissions inspection program in 13 metro Atlanta counties that are part of a federal ozone level non-attainment area, researchers with the Georgia Institute of Technology said on June 15.
"Georgians spend a major chunk of change on inspections and repairs, so you want to make sure the inspections program is working," said Michael Rodgers, associate director of the Georgia Tech Research Institute's (GTRI) Aerospace, Transportation and Advanced Systems Laboratory and group leader of air quality research. "We've found that it is indeed reducing vehicle emissions in the region. The state is investing less than 1 percent of the cost of the program to monitor it. So that's a cost-effective solution."
The numbers tell the story: about 420,000 vehicles assessed for emissions each year at more than 60 monitoring sites, data gathered for at least 100 days a year in the field. Fifteen years of systematic data collection along the roadside, now with a fourth generation of equipment.
It's all to see if the $80 million to $100 million a year Georgians pay for vehicle emissions inspections and repairs is well spent.
These numbers describe the scope and impact of a long-term research study on vehicle emissions and air quality in 21 metro Atlanta counties, plus four more in Macon and Augusta, Ga. The study is meeting the monitoring needs of Georgia's state government and offering significant insights that help direct both research and policy, Rodgers noted.
Rodgers and his team began monitoring vehicle emissions in 1991 with a pilot program that began in the Georgia Tech School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. With funding from the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, he and his staff designed the Continuous Atlanta Fleet Evaluation (CAFÉ) study and have systematically collected this data using remote sensing technology since the spring of 1993.
CAFÉ is noted among environmental monitoring programs for the length and depth of the study, Rodgers said. "When you gather systematic data over a long period of time, you can better understand how things change," he explained. "Over time, you can gradually see how the vehicle fleet changes, how its operation changes and how emissions change."
The vehicle emissions database has revealed some interesting trends, Rodgers noted. Highlights include:
"We've been able to monitor these changes as they have occurred, so it's been enormously enlightening," Rodgers said. "We're not speculating on whether what we think is true is true; we can actually look at the data."
Rodgers also conducts research on vehicle emissions modeling under his joint appointment in the Georgia Tech School of Civil and Environmental Engineering.
Michael Rodgers: http://www.ce.gatech.edu/fac_staff/research_bio.php?active_id=mr19
On April 2, 2008, exactly one year after the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in Massachusetts v. EPA, 12 states, supported by an additional five states as amicus curiae, as well as the District of Columbia, the cities of New York and Baltimore, and a number of environmental organizations, filed a petition for mandamus with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit seeking to compel the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to act on remand within 60 days.