Thursday, August 23, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: GE says first to meet 2015 U.S. rail emission rules

Reuters: Regulatory News
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GE says first to meet 2015 U.S. rail emission rules
Aug 24th 2012, 04:00

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Fri Aug 24, 2012 12:00am EDT

  * Key milestone for GE's fastest-growing division      * Locomotive does not rely on urea additive      * GE says confident will win EPA approval for technology        By Scott Malone      Aug 24 (Reuters) - General Electric Co on Friday  plans to unveil a new generation of railroad locomotive that  will meet strict U.S. emission standards set to take effect in  2015.      The new Evolution locomotive keeps the largest U.S.  conglomerate a step ahead of rival Caterpillar Inc's   Electro-Motive Diesel train unit and will allow railroads to  meet emission standards without adding another fluid to the list  of chemicals needed to maintain trains, GE officials contend.      The locomotive aims to meet a new U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency standard that will require a 76 percent  reduction in diesel engines' emissions of nitrogen oxide, a  pollutant associated with asthma, as well as limiting particle  emissions, without using the additive urea.      In going without urea, GE is using a different technology  than makers of heavy trucks have chosen. Navistar International  Corp last month backed off from its effort to develop a  compliant urea-free engine after extensive delays in its efforts  to win EPA approval, saying it would begin buying engines made  by Cummins Inc that use urea -- the same technology its  rivals have adopted.      GE officials said they are confident their locomotive will  meet the new emission standards -- a critical step to keep the  company's fastest-growing division on track. Through the first  six months of 2012, profits at the rail division rose 53 percent  to $514 million on a 33 percent rise in sales to $2.84 billion.      "We've spent a lot of time with the EPA as we've gone  through this," said Lorenzo Simonelli, CEO of GE's  Transportation arm, which makes locomotives. "We're very  confident that with our global research center, with the amount  of testing we've done, that we've got a solution that works."      The company has invested $600 million in the locomotive.            TEMPERATURE MANAGEMENT      GE's approach works by carefully managing the engine's  temperature -- hitting a point hot enough to limit the amount of  nitrogen oxide produced by burning diesel fuel but not getting  so hot to cause a dramatic rise in output of carbon dioxide, a  greenhouse gas linked to climate change.      Finding a way to meet the standards without using urea was a  higher priority for railroads than truckers, said Rob McKeel,  general manager of GE's global locomotive operations.      "Our customers didn't want to go that way because of the  infrastructure investment that would be required for such a  fixed network. They can't do like trucks and just turn left,"  into a service station if it needs urea, McKeel said.      The engines GE has tested in labs so far have all met the  EPA's numeric targets, McKeel said. The company will not submit  a locomotive for EPA approval until it has tested them in actual  use -- a step it plans to take over the next two years, as it  plans to ship 30 locomotives to the largest U.S. railroads to  test in a variety of load and climactic conditions.      While the company has not yet secured commitments, it aims  to conduct tests with all the largest U.S. railroads, McKeel  said. That group includes Union Pacific Corp, CSX Corp   and Norfolk Southern.      GE is not the only company working on the Tier 4 standards  -- Union Pacific said on Wednesday that the railroad and  Caterpillar's rail arm had developed an experimental locomotive  it would use in California to test varying technological  approaches to meeting the upcoming tighter emissions standard.  
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