
Tired of
smelling like gas after using your landscaping equipment? That smell is from
volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and other air pollutants, that come from
gas-powered landscaping equipment. These emissions impact employee health and
the air quality in the populated communities the equipment serves. Using
electric-powered equipment has many benefits including:
-
No smell –
Safer for employee health and more pleasant to work with
-
Lighter
-- Easy to use, haul up, and carry across distances and multiple
locations
-
Powerful
-- Equal performance to gas in most applications
-
Saves money
-- No more buying gas. Save lost productivity from less maintenance and
time spent in the shop as well down time from flooding.
-
Safer for employees
-- Reduces respiratory health impacts, lessens hearing loss, eases cord
and lifting-related injuries, and reduces cuts and burns
-
Battery life - Often
a short charge time and battery lasts for hours
Up to
$300,000 in grant funding available to switch from your old, 2-cycle gasoline
to electric-powered landscaping equipment.
The
maximum grant amount is $24,000. There is 50% matching funds for scrapping
your equipment to be replaced, and a 70% match to keep your current equipment. Example equipment:
pole saws, string or hedge trimmers, leaf and backpack blowers, mowers, and
chain saws.
Eligible
applicants include all Minnesota-based businesses under 500 employees,
governmental agencies, educational institutions, non-profits, or trade
groups/associations. Special consideration given for targeted applicants in
environmental justice and highly urbanized areas.
The
easy, 2-page application has a calculator to help you figure out emissions
-- all you need to know is the horsepower, hours used annually, and estimated
remaining life left on your gas engine. The calculator does the rest!
Apply now! Deadline:
December 5, 2018.
Projects
of all sizes encouraged to apply! Find grant materials on the MPCA grants to improve air webpage. For
general questions, contact kari.cantarero@state.mn.us or 651-757-2875.
Over
$15,000 has already been awarded to organizations switching to
battery-powered landscaping equipment. These purchases reduced VOCs by 11.3
tons, NOx by .04 tons, and PM by .33 tons per year.
The
estimated 20,000,000 small engines sold each year in the U.S. are the largest
single contributor to non-road emissions. The average gasoline push mower
creates 14.76 pounds of air pollution an hour – the same amount of pollution
as driving your car for 200 miles. Landscaping equipment emissions are not
regulated and a large contributor to bad air quality, which is why the MPCA
is relying on voluntary efforts to reduce these emissions in populated areas.
|