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Maryland’s Innovative Measures State Implementation Plan

Maryland’s Innovative Measures State Implementation Plan. 2004 EPA Air Innovations Conference Brian J. Hug – Chief, Air Quality Policy and Planning Division 410-537-4125 bhug@mde.state.md.us. Maryland’s Air Quality. Ozone levels in Maryland are very high Fine particulate levels are high

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Maryland’s Innovative Measures State Implementation Plan

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  1. Maryland’s Innovative Measures State Implementation Plan 2004 EPA Air Innovations Conference Brian J. Hug – Chief, Air Quality Policy and Planning Division 410-537-4125 bhug@mde.state.md.us

  2. Maryland’s Air Quality • Ozone levels in Maryland are very high • Fine particulate levels are high • Air pollution contributes significantly to Bay pollution • Regional haze and air toxics are also significant air pollution problems in Maryland

  3. Maryland’s Innovative Measures SIP • A very flexible SIP that: • Bundles together several land use projects and other innovations that generate air quality benefits • Establishes conservative emission reductions targets for the short term and a larger and more aggressive target in the long term (these projects take time to develop) • No pressure on individual programs – pressure only on the bundle itself • Builds off of EPA’s land-use and voluntary measures guidance • Also incorporates trading concepts to address uncertainty and to create incentives

  4. The “Bundle” • Land Use Initiatives • Infill development in Baltimore City • TOD • Mixed Use Development • Transportation Measures • Maryland Commuter Tax Credit Initiative • Alternatively Fueled Vehicle Program • Incident Management Program • Episodic Controls (Ozone Action Days)

  5. “The Can Company” • Brownfield site • Portion of revitalized waterfront • Variety of mixed use commercial tenants • Redeveloped housing nearby

  6. “Montgomery Park” • MDE’s new offices • Former Montgomery Wards warehouse • Now undergoing “green building” restoration

  7. Benefits of Smart Infill Development • Expected reduction of 340,000 – 700,000 VMT per day • Increased emphasis on transit • NOx and VOC benefits should exceed .5 tpd in 2005 (higher in 2025) • Significant reduction on Greenhouse Gas Emissions (especially CO2 – could be over 100 tons per day !)

  8. Transit Oriented Development • Multi-use development at the end of the Baltimore Metro Line • Pedestrian bridge to link offices/retail with metro station • Improved bike and pedestrian access

  9. Mixed Use Development • Just outside of Annapolis in Anne Arundel County • Redevelopment of central business district • Mixed use • Proposed bus and trolley station • Still in planning stage – lots of controversy

  10. Transportation Initiatives • Commuter Tax Credit Program • Incident Management (CHART Program) • Alternative Fuel Vehicle Program

  11. Episodic Reductions: Ozone Action Days • Clean Air Partners coordinates a regional ozone education & voluntary action program for Baltimore and Washington • Effort focuses voluntary reductions from: • Vehicle use • Paint and consumer product use • Lawn and garden equipment • Annual and episodic surveys to track progress

  12. Land Use Credit Tools • Current tools are relatively new and will be refined with time • SIP is using a multiple tool/ model approach • During future analysis new tools and models will be used to further refine the expected emission benefits

  13. Multi-Pollutant Benefits • Original initiatives focus on reducing vehicle miles traveled (VMT) • SIP approach could be used for other initiatives or pollutants in the future • Reducing VMT lowers mobile source emissions across the board • Particulate Matter • Volatile organic compounds (VOC) • Nitrogen oxides (NOx) • Greenhouse Gases • Toxics

  14. Challenges • Coordination with other agencies and interested parties • Connections with transportation planning • Analysis tools/Quantification • Multi-purpose SIP (policy driven) • Changes in Overarching Policy and Timing • 1hr vs 8hr Ozone Standards – where does this concept fit best? - does this work best to maintain the NAAQ standards as real benefits (to combat continued sprawl) are decades and not years away?

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