Caterpillar plans to meet upcoming U.S. EPA Tier 4 Interim, European Stage IIIB and Japan MLIT Step 4 mobile non-road emissions regulations that take affect in the year 2011. These emission standards will require emissions reductions of particulate matter (PM) by 90 percent and oxides of nitrogen (NOx) up to 50 percent beyond EPA Tier 3/EU Stage IIIA standards.
Caterpillar technology plans cover all Caterpillar industrial engine applications and regions subject to these emissions regulations. Less than 75 hp Tier 4 Interim compliant industrial engines, now in production, were announced in 2007. The engine emissions technologies represented in these plans will meet Caterpillar global industrial engine OEM customer needs for highly integrated, yet flexible engine systems.
Caterpillar previously achieved dramatic reductions in regulated engine emissions through the launch of ACERT Technology for Tier 3/Stage IIIA. The technology being launched today establishes the foundation for virtually zero particulate matter non-road emissions by 2014, Caterpillar says. These reductions are coupled with the additional environmental benefit of fewer greenhouse gas emissions achieved through planned fuel efficiency improvements.
Utilizing ACERT Technology as a foundation, Caterpillar will add next generation turbo charging, advanced electronics, advanced fuel systems, particulate aftertreatment systems and a suite of NOx reduction technologies to provide tailored emissions solutions to industrial engine OEM customers.
To provide additional customer value and further leverage successful platforms, Caterpillar will offer a new 7 liter engine designed specifically for Tier 4 Interim and future emissions compliance. In addition, the industrial C9 ACERT will feature increased displacement. These two developments will offer customers additional power choices in the very important 250-400 hp segment.
As Caterpillar leverages its suite of ACERT solutions, particulate reduction technology will include the use of advanced combustion technology, oxidation catalysts and diesel particulate filters with advanced regeneration systems that will optimize uptime, fuel efficiency and operator convenience. During the past 14 years, Caterpillar has produced more than one million particulate aftertreatment devices.
A suite of NOx reduction technologies will be tailored to optimally meet varied customer requirements. Caterpillar non-road mobile industrial engines will not use selective catalytic reduction (SCR) for Tier 4 Interim regulations. In each case, Caterpillar has selected and implemented the technology that optimally satisfies customer needs based on the application and emissions regulations.
“Caterpillar customers can expect Tier 4 Interim/Stage IIIB engines to continue to provide excellent power, response and durability as did Tier 3/Stage IIIA engines, with fuel efficiency improvements planned,” says Hans Haefeli, Caterpillar vice president responsible for industrial engines.