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newsrel -- Tire pressure check will save money, gas and lives

Posted: 26 Mar 2009 09:35:18
Automotive service industry must check tire pressure on all
vehicles. 

Release 07-25
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
							
CONTACT: Dimitri Stanich
March 26, 2009	
							
(916) 322-2990
www.arb.ca.gov

Tire pressure check will save money, gas and lives
Requirement for automotive service industry will reduce
emissions and improve mileage

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Today, the Air Resources Board adopted a
regulation that will require California’s automotive maintenance
industry to check the tire pressure of every vehicle they
service.

Effective July 1, 2010, this rule, one of 44 early action
measures required by AB 32, will annually:
•	Eliminate 700,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions;
•	Reduce the state’s fuel consumption by 75 million gallons;
and, 
•	Extend the average tire’s useful life by 4,700 miles.

“Checking tire pressure is one of the many simple things that we
can all do to reduce our impact on the environment,” said ARB
board member Barbara Riordan. “While we should do this monthly,
this measure makes it convenient and regular.”

The 40,000 service providers subject to the regulation include
smog check stations, engine repair facilities and oil service
providers. Those not included are car wash, body and paint, and
glass repair businesses. 

"Under-inflated tires waste fuel, cause tires to wear out
prematurely and increase drivers' safety risk," said Dan
Zielinski, senior vice president with the Rubber Manufacturers
Association, which represents tire manufacturers.  "This
regulation will help protect California's environment, help
consumers save money in fuel and tire costs, and help
Californians optimize vehicle safety."

The cost of implementing the regulation balanced with the
benefits from the measures will save the average Californian 12
dollars per year. About 38 percent of vehicles on the road in
California today have severely under inflated tires, six pounds
under manufacturer’s recommendations.  As well as seriously
reducing the vehicle’s handling capabilities, under inflation can
cause irreparable damage, reduce tread life and force the engine
to work harder thus increasing the amount of fuel needed.

California is leading the nation in efforts to cut emissions of
gases linked to higher temperatures around the globe. The Global
Warming Solutions Act or AB 32, signed by Governor Schwarzenegger
in 2006, requires the ARB to draft and implement strategies that
will reduce the state’s greenhouse gas contributions. Recently,
the ARB proposed a Low Carbon Fuel Standard, a regulation curbing
greenhouse gas emissions from all of the state’s transportation
fuels.

“This regulation is an example of how the drive to meet AB 32
goals will benefit the state,” Riordan continued. “Reducing our
environmental footprint will reinvigorate our economy by
establishing California as the lead source of technological
innovation, diversifying our state’s fuel sources, creating jobs
and helping efforts to avert climate change which threatens the
state’s ecosystem.”

The Air Resources Board is a department of the California
Environmental Protection Agency.  ARB’s mission is to promote and
protect public health, welfare, and ecological resources through
effective reduction of air pollutants while recognizing and
considering effects on the economy.  The ARB oversees all air
pollution control efforts in California to attain and maintain
health based air quality standards.

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