What's All The Fuss About The EPA 'Banning' Modifications For Racing Cars?

A proposed regulation from the EPA appears to outlaw the tampering of emissions controls on competition vehicles, but the organisation has since stated that the practice is already illegal
What's All The Fuss About The EPA 'Banning' Modifications For Racing Cars?

If you spent any time browsing CT last night, you’ll have seen ‘EPA’ and ‘banning’ crop up quite a bit. So what is it that the USA’s Environmental Protection Agency has done that’s caused such a stir? It’s all to do with a proposed regulation catchily titled as the ‘Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Fuel Efficiency Standards for Medium- and Heavy-Duty Engines and Vehicles - Phase 2’. The offending part of the regulation is as follows: “the Clean Air Act does not allow any person to disable, remove, or render inoperative (i.e., tamper with) emission controls on a certified motor vehicle for purposes of competition.”

Pretty worrying, no? Particularly given how common it is to remove catalytic converters, change maps and perform numerous other emissions-effecting modifications on competition cars. And yes, this applies to cars which are used solely away from the public highway.

What's All The Fuss About The EPA 'Banning' Modifications For Racing Cars?

Naturally, this caught the attention of the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA), whose president and CEO Chris Kersting, said:

“This proposed regulation represents overreaching by the agency, runs contrary to the law and defies decades of racing activity where EPA has acknowledged and allowed conversion of vehicles…Congress did not intend the original Clean Air Act to extend to vehicles modified for racing and has re-enforced that intent on more than one occasion.”

In a press release, SEMA said that it has met with the EPA to discuss the proposal. “The EPA indicated that the regulation would prohibit conversion of vehicles into racecars and make the sale of certain emissions-related parts for use on converted vehicles illegal,” the organisation stated.

What's All The Fuss About The EPA 'Banning' Modifications For Racing Cars?

The EPA intends to publish final regulations by July 2016, but many could be breaking the law already. After seeking clarification on the organisation’s proposals, Autoblog was sent the following statement from the EPA:

“People may use EPA-certified motor vehicles for competition, but to protect public health from air pollution, the Clean Air Act has – since its inception – specifically prohibited tampering with or defeating the emission control systems on those vehicles.

The proposed regulation that SEMA has commented on does not change this long-standing law, or approach. Instead, the proposed language in the Heavy-Duty Greenhouse Gas rulemaking simply clarifies the distinction between motor vehicles and nonroad vehicles such as dirt bikes and snowmobiles.”

According to Autoblog, those falling foul of these tampering rules could be liable for a civil penalty of up to $37,500 “for each engine or piece of equipment in violation.” Whether or not the EPA will take the time to enforce such penalties is unclear.

We’ll be following this story with interest as it unfolds. In the meantime, discuss the news with the CT community: ‘EPA’ is trending

Comments

Anonymous

It is. They just don’t enforce it.

Until they decide to.

Because politics.

02/10/2016 - 11:04 |
116 | 0
DeLeon

Well just put the biggest catalytic converters in your car and you’ll be fine ;)

02/10/2016 - 11:15 |
0 | 10
Anonymous

In reply to by DeLeon

I can’t afford to put a cat back on my car being the previous owner removed it.

02/10/2016 - 15:19 |
2 | 0
Fastlane Blocker

For real? This is the same gouvernment, that enforces fraking and builds nuklear power stations with no knowledge of what todo with waste. Come on how much environmental damage would a few thousand racecars do. Not nearly measurable.

02/10/2016 - 11:19 |
108 | 0

your average oil and nuclear company has a lot more money to “donate” to certain parts or people in government than your average racing driver

02/10/2016 - 14:11 |
32 | 0

The 16 largest shipping freighters put out more pollution than all the cars on earth combined and are completely unregulated.

02/10/2016 - 15:45 |
20 | 2

While I agree that fracking is f**ng awful and shouldn’t be done, nuclear power is arguably the most efficient and one of the safest forms of power we have today. The safety regulations surrounding it are incredible.

02/10/2016 - 17:25 |
8 | 0
Ariel G

So this is only cats were talking about, not “the whole modding industry”. Honestly, I’d want everyone to be using a cat - it’s our air after all. But, I feel like the EPA is losing perspective. If they truly went through priorities, they’d have to put a Cat on cows first…

02/10/2016 - 11:19 |
18 | 2

This also applies to cars that have a remapped ECU or a standalone aftermarket one with a map on it that’s focussed on making power with no mind to what kind of emissions it’s putting out.. it’s basically everything emissions related. which is worrying, because basically every engine mod could become at least more expensive.

02/10/2016 - 11:33 |
8 | 0
Andrew G.

I thought that as long as you weren’t on public roads you could do something like take off the catalytic converter for racing. I mean there are certain “off road” only parts I have seen. A single car does not contribute a lot of polution, it’s only the sum of all cars in an area. That’s why rural county’s in my state, Pennsylvania, have no emissions testing.

02/10/2016 - 11:23 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

I hate my life

02/10/2016 - 11:30 |
0 | 2
Noimagination

So, are they going to look at pollution caused by producing massive amounts of electricity required to power the lights for the superbowl?

02/10/2016 - 11:55 |
12 | 2

Thanks m8 you’re helping out the cause

02/10/2016 - 14:18 |
8 | 0

Thanks much- just signed.

02/10/2016 - 14:55 |
4 | 0
ForcedInduction

Hey EPA every heard of Factories, Coal power plants, Petroleum power plants, Planes, Trains, or maybe the excess gasoline burned in refineries? Not to mention how much pollution is made to produce a single catalytic converter and to mine the metals as well as make the factory that produces them? I feel as the EPA should leave cars alone and take a look at other things.

02/10/2016 - 12:04 |
44 | 0

They should focus on how to put the methane from cattle to good use. tired of the EPA taking the life out of vehicles for the last 40 odd years.

02/10/2016 - 12:16 |
42 | 0

The government literally exempted coal powerplants from the EPA. This is America and it’s an oligarchy. Here you have to pay the political opinion fee and then make a bid. Congress voting here should be classified as an auction, because that’s basically how it works.

02/10/2016 - 14:21 |
12 | 0
hotch370z (Z Guy)

EPA is another useless government sector that wastes taxpayer money on stupid stuff. They should focus on large corporations dumping waste in our rivers or air. Less than 1 per ent of drivers even remove their cats and affect emisions. It’s like going after a drop in the bucket.

02/10/2016 - 12:22 |
32 | 0

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