Vehicle Emission Control Form Community Concern and nitrogen oxides for 1975 and public health. grams per mile of hydrocarbons 1976 model cars. These poll- Robert W. Fri, Acting Ad- and 3.4 grams per mile of carbon utants, it has been shown, may ministrator of the Environmental monoxide, have a harmful effect on human Protection Agency, emphasizes To underline the degree of health. Congress decreed that strongly that the decision does progress manifested in these hydrocarbons and carbon not adversely affect air quality in goals, consider that emissions monoxide put out by 1975 and any significant way. It does not from pre-control cars-before later model cars must be 90 - add major burdens to States that 1968 models--were 8.7 grams per percent less than emissions from already have to design and im- mile of hydrocarbons and 87 1970 models, and that nitrogen piement transportation controls, grams per mile of carbon oxides put out by 1976 and later But the decision does offer the monoxide, model cars must be 90 percentpromise of insuring that efficient Nitrogen oxides are a third less than emissions from 1971 and durable automotive emission component of automobile models. control technology will be emissions and the Clean Air Act Congress authorized EPA to available to the public nationwide states that these pollutants from suspend application of the by the fall of 1975. and that this 1976 and late model cars must be standards for one year under technology will make a major 90 percent less than from 1971 certain conditions. In 1972, EPA contribution in cleaning up the models. However, recently turned down a request by several Nation’s air. completed EPA studies of actual car manufacturers for such a Mr, Fri presented a few figures nitrogen oxide levels in the air, suspension. In early 1973, in an to show what the decision aims to when compared with the air appeal brought by the car accomplish: quality standards that have been manufacturers against the EPA -- In all States except set to protect public health, do not decision, a Federal court ordered California, the emission stan- support the need for a9O percent EPA to reconsider the suspension dards for new 1975 model cars reduction in automobile request. After public hearings, will be 1.5 grams per mile of emissions of nitrogen oxides, the EPA decision was issued on hydrocarbons and 15 grams per Accordingly, EPA, after further April 11, 1973. The request for a mile of carbon monoxide. studies, may recommend that one-year suspension of the 1975 -- Because of California’s Congress amend the Clean Air motor vehicle standards under especially 'serious air quality Act to permit the Agency to fix the Clean Air Act of 1970 was problem, emission standards for whatever standard is necessary granted. Essentially, the EPA new 1975 model cars sold'in to achieve the degree of reduction decision provided for an orderly California will be more stringent needed. phase-in of new emissions control -- 0.9 grams per mile of A fundamental component of technology and set new interim hydrocarbons and 9 grams per the EPA April decision was the standards that will mean sub- mile of carbon monoxide. (About conviction that oxidation stantially reduced automotive one-tenth of new car production is catalysts to control emissions are emissions. The decision insured sold in California.) workable and that the public against any disruption of the New 1976 model cars sold interest dictated that the steady progress already being anywhere in the United States catalysts be phased into use by made toward cleaner emissions will have to meet the Clean Air setting standards in California and toward the protection of Act’s emission standards of 0.41 that would require their use on all conventional automobiles sold in that state in 1975. And the interim standard set for the rest of the Nation for 1975 models also would likely require the use of catalysts on some models. We chose to phase in the catalysts because of the potential societal disruption involved in attempting to apply this new technology across all car lines in one year. Across-the-board in troduction in one year would have The American farm com munity is part of the most mobile society the world has ever known thanks to the development of the automobile and of our great network of highways and feeder roads. And agriculture today is as dependent on our massive transportation complex as any other segment of American enterprise-in many respects more so. With this tremendous blessing of mobility, however, has come the serious problem of air pollution. The largest single contributor to air pollution is the automobile. So the primary cure is to reduce the amount of pollutants emitted by individual motor vehicles or to reduce the number of vehicles on the road. Either cure-or a combination thereof (which is most likely)- certainly will be of concern to motor* vehicle owners in the agricultural community. This is why the opportunity is taken to explain a complex and con troversial decision by the En vironmental Protection Agency (EPA). The decision, made last April, sets the course for the next few years for Federal, State, and local officials in pursuing national transportation strategies. First, some background to the decision. The Clean Air Act amendments of 1970 set strict standards for the emissions of hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide. Lancaster Farming, Saturday, August 11,1973 45-degree feeding system stops plugging, boosts capacity 56810WH The International® 56 Blower handles 100- tons of corn silage an hour blows it up to 100-ft. or more. • Haylage. corn silage or wet corn is angered in a straight-line flow to rotor by 45° feeding system. Speeds flow of materials through blower . . . practically eliminates plugging. • Exclusive 56-inch diamater, straddle-mounted rotor. Independent feed auger clutch • Simple, direct 540 rpm PTO drive. Transport wheels adjustable for ground clearance, height or leveling. ■ _ MLet us show you why this 56 Blower ® works as fast as you can unload. MESSICK FARM EQUIP. fumbmhtown COPE & WEAVER CO. NfWPROVIDfNCE 786 7351 MOUNIVI IF PA INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER Sales and Service f PHHAtA involved real risks, says Mr. Fri. Our phase-in program, as suggested, will have significantly harmful effect air quality. The April decision will not adversely affect the momentum of progress toward achieving the 1975 standards. Instead Mr. Fn stated he believes it is part of the evolutionary process toward cleaning up automobile emissions envisioned by the Congress when it molded and passed the Clean Air Act of 1970 Full-Employment Growth Anticipated By Bank of America The pattern of consumer spending over the' next six to nine months will largely determine the overall pattern of economic activity in the United States over the next two years, says a Bank of America economic forecast. “The longer the current boom in consumer durables continues, the more severe will be the correction in 1974,” says the current fore cast, “Fopus on the U.S. Economy: the Next 18 Months.” The big question facing the economy is whether the rapid expansion during the first half of 1973 can be slowed to more sustainable rates with out causing an actual down turn in economic activity. The report indicates that it can. “We believe a sustainable full-employment growth path will be achieved without a full-blown recession,” the bank’s economists say. “How ever, real output growth could be close to zero or even negative in one quarter in late 1973 or early 1974.” Try A Classified Ad! 0f C. B. HOOBER & SON 1319 INTERCOURSE R. S. HOLLINGER & SON 733 2283 5 786 8231 285 4538