SchoolBus logo in red and orange
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Obama signs Diesel Emissions Reduction Act

The program, which provides funds to reduce emissions from school buses and other diesel vehicles, is reauthorized for another five years. An industry official calls it "one of the most important clean air initiatives passed by Congress in recent years."

January 6, 2011
Obama signs Diesel Emissions Reduction Act

A five-year reauthorization of the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act was among the bills that President Obama signed into law on Tuesday.

2 min to read


WASHINGTON, D.C. — President Obama on Tuesday signed the Diesel Emissions Reduction Act (DERA) into law after it was approved last month by Congress.

The move reauthorizes for another five years the bipartisan program, which provides funds to reduce emissions from school buses and other diesel vehicles.

Ad Loading...

The reauthorization bill was introduced in November by Senators George Voinovich (R-Ohio) and Tom Carper (D-Del.) and cosponsored by several of their colleagues.

"By cleaning up old diesel engines — like those on the school buses that take our children to school every day — DERA saves lives and creates a demand for clean diesel technology, which in turn creates American jobs," Carper said. "DERA leverages federal dollars so efficiently that for every $1 invested, we get over $13 in health and economic benefits in return."

On Tuesday, Carper held a press conference and toured recently retrofitted school buses at Delaware's Cape Henlopen School District, a recipient of DERA grants.

Allen Schaeffer, executive director of the Diesel Technology Forum, called DERA "one of the most important clean air initiatives passed by Congress in recent years."

“The combination of new clean diesel technology and ultra-low sulfur diesel fuel has helped to reduce diesel emissions to near zero levels for new buses, trucks and off-road equipment," Schaeffer said. "Now the older engines that continue to power our economy will also benefit from the upgraded engines and filters provided by DERA."

Ad Loading...

The National School Transportation Association (NSTA), one of the members of the broad DERA coalition, said that it fought for changes that were included in the final version to allow for direct applications from private entities under contract to federal, state or local governments; streamlining the application process, especially for small businesses; and giving higher priority for projects that benefit school areas.

The annual appropriation level reportedly was reduced from $200 million to $100 million to ensure the bill's passage, but NSTA noted that that level is still higher than the past three annual appropriations.

 

More Alternative Fuels

An orgnge, white, and black graphic with a black and white image ofpropane school buses.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesJanuary 30, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Product Innovations & Funding Outlooks

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including electric and propane bus deployments, new EV products, and an update from CARB.

Read More →
SponsoredJanuary 19, 2026

3 New Ways Fleet Software Pays: ROI opportunities for modern fleet managers

Keeping buses safe, reliable, and on schedule requires more than manual processes. This eBook explores how modern fleet software supports school transportation teams with automated maintenance scheduling, smarter video safety tools, and integrated data systems. Discover practical ways fleets are reducing breakdowns, improving safety, and saving valuable staff time.

Read More →
An orgnge, white, and black graphic with a black and white image of electric school buses.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesJanuary 14, 2026

Alt-Fuel Moves: Manufacturing Growth & Energy Storage Expansion

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including manufacturing expansions, major funding awards, and energy storage strategies.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A man connecting a Zenobē charger to a school bus.
ManagementDecember 12, 2025

Electric School Bus Financing: Making Fleet Transitions Operationally Sustainable for the Long Haul

Electric school bus success hinges on long-term planning, which means smart financing, battery management, and service-based models that keep fleets reliable for years.

Read More →
An orgnge, white, and black graphic with a black and white detail shot of lights on a school bus.
Alternative Fuelsby Elora HaynesDecember 8, 2025

Alt-Fuel Moves: New V2G Tech and Electric Bus Rollouts

Check out some of the latest moves where alternative fuels and school buses intersect, including new product announcements and bus deployments across the U.S.

Read More →
Row of yellow school buses parked in a lot with the Nuvve logo and an electric charging icon overlaid in the foreground.
Alternative Fuelsby News/Media ReleaseDecember 1, 2025

Nuvve Strikes Deal to Electrify N.M. District School Buses

Nuvve’s latest partnership in New Mexico aims to help districts transition to electric school buses while strengthening local grid reliability.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
A black and white image of a Thomas Built Wattson bus with text reading "Electric Buses: Progress, Promise, and the Practical Road Ahead."
Alternative FuelsNovember 21, 2025

Electric School Buses: Progress, Promise, and the Practical Road Ahead

The push for electric school buses grows, but real-world hurdles mean districts are adopting EVs slowly and mixing them with diesel and propane.

Read More →
South Coast AQMD logo alongside a school bus driving on a roadway, representing new funding to replace diesel buses with zero-emission models for Southern California school districts.
Alternative Fuelsby News/Media ReleaseNovember 20, 2025

California Agency to Fund $78M in New Clean School Buses

South Coast AQMD plans to replace 286 older buses with newer models, plus accompanying infrastructure, across 35 districts in the South Coast Air Basin.

Read More →
Christine Koester from the EPA speaks at a podium with the NASDPTS logo during a conference. A bold graphic reads “EPA Update” with megaphone and lightning bolt icons around her.
Alternative Fuelsby Amanda HuggettNovember 20, 2025

Where EPA School Bus Funding Stands: CSBP, DERA, and Heavy-Duty Grants Update

One program ends, another looks to be reimagined, and the Clean School Bus Program is in a holding pattern — here’s where each EPA program stands and what to expect moving forward.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Front view of an all-electric Blue Bird school bus.
Alternative Fuelsby StaffNovember 19, 2025

West Aurora District 129 Launches 27 Electric School Buses Backed by Nearly $1M in ComEd EV Rebates

The Illinois district’s new electric bus fleet, supported by EPA grants, ComEd incentives, and Highland Electric Fleets, advances its commitment to sustainable school operations.

Read More →