Ruling to decide fate of Navistar’s non-compliant engines

Updated Aug 8, 2012

Maxxforce Copy 2The Chicago Tribune is reporting today that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has filed a final ruling on whether Navistar will be allowed to continue to pay fines to sell diesel engines that do not meet current 2010 diesel exhaust emissions standards. According to the report, in a filing on a U.S. General Services Administration website, the EPA declared that it had filed its rule for review but did not disclose details of the final ruling.

An earlier interim ruling had allowed Navistar to pay “non-compliance penalties” (NCPs) while continuing to sell engines that did not meet EPA emissions guidelines, pending the final EPA ruling filed this week.

The interim ruling was challenged in Federal court by Navistar competitors, who claimed the NCPs did not constitute a realistic penalty for not meeting emission regulations and therefore gave Navistar a competitive advantage over companies that had invested in and delivered emissions solutions that did meet the EPA emissions regulations.

The court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs on June 12 (click here to see coverage of that ruling), concluding that the EPA didn’t meet any of the statutory criteria for issuing a “good cause” exception.

Navistar spokesperson Karen Denning told the Tribune the company “is encouraged by the submittal of the final rule to (the Office of Management and Budget) and we hope that it generally mirrors what was in the interim rule.”

When asked for comment, an EPA spokesperson said the final ruling has been sent to the Office of Budget Management to undergo a review process. As of now, no firm timeline for the final, public release of the final rule can be given.

Showcase your workhorse
Add a photo of your rig to our Reader Rigs collection to share it with your peers and the world. Tell us the story behind the truck and your business to help build its story.
Submit Your Rig
Reader Rig Submission