NOx Budget Trading Program
Overview
The NOx Budget Trading Program (NBP) was a cap and trade program created to reduce the regional transport of NOx emissions from power plants and other large combustion sources in the eastern United States. The NBP began in 2003 and was designed to reduce NOx emissions during the warm summer months, referred to as the ozone season, when ground-level ozone concentrations are highest. The program was a central component of the NOx SIP (State Implementation Plan) Call, promulgated in 1998.
From the beginning of program implementation in 2003 to 2008, the NBP dramatically reduced NOx emissions from power plants and industrial sources during the summer months, contributing significantly to improvements in ozone air quality in the eastern United States. Learn more about progress under the NBP.
Beginning in 2009, the NBP was effectively replaced by the ozone season NOx program under the Clean Air Interstate Rule, which required further summertime NOx reductions from the power sector.
NOx SIP Call
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See the entire rulemaking history of the NOx SIP Call Regional Transport of Ozone (RTO).