In October 2016, Volkswagen (VW) settled with the U.S. government resolving claims that it violated the Clean Air Act by selling diesel vehicles that violated the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) mobile source emission standards. The violation involved installation and use of emission testing “defeat devices” in approximately 500,000 turbocharged direct injection (TDI) 2.0-liter diesel engine vehicles sold and operated in the United States from model year 2009 through 2015. In May 2017, VW entered into a second settlement with the U.S. government resolving additional claims that it violated the Clean Air Act by selling approximately 80,000 TDI 3.0-liter diesel engines also equipped with defeat devices.
The defeat devices allowed the 2.0-liter and 3.0-liter diesel vehicles to meet the applicable nitrogen oxides (NOx) emission limits during emissions tests while not meeting these limits during normal vehicle operation. To resolve the 2.0-liter and 3.0-liter diesel engine Clean Air Act violations, VW has agreed to provide approximately $16 billion to fund the following actions:
Owners/lessees of VW vehicles should visit VWCourtSettlement for information on vehicle buyback and modification options under the Class Settlement Program.
On Oct. 2, 2017, the executed Final Trust Agreement was filed with the court, establishing the terms and conditions of the Mitigation Trust Fund. The trustee is Wilmington Trust, N.A., and will manage the trust for the beneficiaries. Under the terms of Final Trust Agreement, all 50 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico are eligible to become beneficiaries under the Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement for State Beneficiaries.
Each eligible beneficiary can receive a predetermined share of $2.925 billion, which is based upon the number of 2.0-liter and 3.0-liter diesel vehicles sold in each jurisdiction. Florida’s share is more than $166 million, or 5.68% of the overall Mitigation Trust Fund as specified in Appendix D-1B. The $166 million is the combined amount from the 2.0-liter settlement ($152.4 million), as specified in Appendix D-1 to the Final Trust Agreement and from the 3.0-liter settlement ($12.9 million), as specified in the Appendix D-1A to the Second Partial Consent Decree.
The purpose of Mitigation Trust Fund is to provide money for specified diesel emission reduction projects. These projects are intended to offset excess emissions of NOx caused by the subject vehicles in order to fully mitigate the total, lifetime excess NOx emissions from the 2.0-liter and 3.0-liter vehicles.
The Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement for State Beneficiaries provides a process that the states must follow in order to become beneficiaries under the Volkswagen Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement.
The “Trust Effective Date” is Oct. 2, 2017. For a state to become a Beneficiary, the state must execute and file the Certificate for Beneficiary Status contained in Appendix D-3 by Dec. 1, 2017 – 60 days after the Trust Effective Date.
On Nov. 28, 2017, the state of Florida elected to become a Beneficiary under the Volkswagen Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement by submitting the completed Certification Form to Wilmington Trust, N.A., the court-appointed Trustee. The certification designated the Florida Department of Environmental Protection as the Lead Agency in Florida for purposes of participation in the Volkswagen Environmental Mitigation Trust.
On Jan. 29, 2018, Wilmington Trust filed with the court the Notice of Beneficiary Designation, confirming that the State of Florida is a Beneficiary to the Volkswagen Environmental Mitigation Trust.
Now that the trustee has declared that Florida is a beneficiary, the state is required to prepare and submit to the trustee a Mitigation Plan before the trustee will distribute funds to the state.
The Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement for State Beneficiaries specifies that the following issues be addressed in the Mitigation Plan:
The department will solicit public input to help inform the development of Florida’s Mitigation Plan. Additional information and instructions on how to submit comments will be provided at a future date. The state’s Mitigation Plan is not a formal solicitation for project proposals.
Appendix D-2 of the Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement for State Beneficiaries specifies 10 types of projects eligible for the Mitigation Trust Fund.
These projects are different from the options available to owners/lessees of VW vehicles. VW owners/lessees should visit VWCourtSettlement for information on vehicle buyback and modification options under the Class Settlement Program.
Trust funds may be used to pay some or all of the cost to repower or replace eligible diesel-powered vehicles with new diesel vehicles or engines, alternative fueled vehicles or engines, or replacements with all-electric vehicles or engines. Both privately-owned and government-owned fleets are potentially eligible to receive funding. The settlement expressly requires that the old vehicles and/or diesel engines be scrapped.
Appendix D-2 to the Environmental Mitigation Trust Agreement for State Beneficiaries provides detail on eligible equipment categories, model years and the percentages of matching costs that funding recipients must provide. There are 10 categories of Eligible Mitigation Actions:
Beneficiaries may use Trust Funds for their non-federal voluntary match, pursuant to Title VII, Subtitle G, Section 793 of the DERA Program in the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 16133), or Section 792 (codified at 42 U.S.C. § 16132) in the case of Tribes, thereby allowing Beneficiaries to use such Trust Funds for actions not specifically enumerated in this Appendix D-2, but otherwise eligible under DERA pursuant to all DERA guidance documents available through the EPA. Trust Funds shall not be used to meet the nonfederal mandatory cost share requirements, as defined in applicable DERA program guidance, of any DERA grant.
Event |
Approximate Time Frame |
---|---|
2.0-Liter Partial Settlement approved by Court |
Oct. 25, 2016 |
3.0-Liter Partial Settlement approved by Court |
May 17, 2017 |
Wilmington Trust selected as Trustee |
March 15, 2017 |
Wilmington Trust filed Final Trust Agreement with Court |
Sept. 6, 2017 |
Trust Effective Date |
Oct. 2, 2017 |
Florida Applies to Become a Beneficiary |
Nov. 28, 2017 |
States Notified of Beneficiary Designation | Jan. 30, 2018 |
Florida Submits its Mitigation Plan | At least 30 days prior to submitting any project-specific funding request to the trustee. |
Florida Submits Funding Requests | At least 30 days after submitting the state’s Mitigation Plan to the trustee. |
The department recently held a series of public informational meetings describing the required elements of Florida's State Beneficiary Mitigation Plan and the various approaches that the state may take in prioritizing eligible mitigation actions. In continuation of the department's effort to offer opportunities for the public to learn about Florida's Diesel Emissions Mitigation Program and the mitigation planning process, the department will host two webinars to share this information with interested individuals who were unable to attend the in-person meetings.
These two webinars coincide with a 60-day period for all persons to complete an online public survey, the results of which the department will use in developing Florida’s State Beneficiary Mitigation Plan under the Volkswagen Diesel Emissions Environmental Mitigation Trust. The department respectfully requests that persons planning to attend the public informational webinars RSVP using the links below:
Date | Time | Location | Agenda |
---|---|---|---|
Thursday, April 19, 2018 | 3 – 5 p.m. |
Webinar |
|
Thursday, April 26, 2018 | 6 – 8 p.m. |
Webinar |
The presentation materials that the department used at the in-person meetings are identical to the materials that the department will use on these two webinars.
Individuals interested in submitting general comments on Florida's approach to developing the State Beneficiary Mitigation Plan may also email those comments to VWMitigation@FloridaDEP.gov. At this time, the department is not soliciting funding requests or proposals for any specific diesel emissions mitigation project.
Date | Time | Location | Agenda |
---|---|---|---|
Wednesday, March 21, 2018 | 3 – 5 p.m. |
Department of Environmental Protection |
|
Thursday, March 22, 2018 | 3 – 5 p.m. |
Department of Environmental Protection Bob Martinez Center |
|
Tuesday, March 27, 2018 | 3 – 5 p.m |
Department of Environmental Protection |
|
Wednesday, March 28, 2018 | 3 – 5 p.m. |
Department of Environmental Protection |
|
Thursday, March 29, 2018 | 3 – 5 p.m. |
Department of Environmental Protection |
On March 13, 2018, the department announced a series of public informational meetings and the opening of a 60-day period for all persons to complete an online public survey, the results of which the department will use in the development of Florida’s State Beneficiary Mitigation Plan under the Volkswagen Diesel Emissions Environmental Mitigation Trust. Over this 60-day period, the department facilitated five in-person informational meetings around the state and two informational webinars, each of which covered the same topics and used the same presentation materials.
DEP has established an email list for parties interested in following developments related to the State Mitigation Plan and future activity under the Mitigation Trust Fund. Please visit DEP's subscription page below to sign up for email updates:
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