British Columbia

AirCare emissions program ending for Metro Vancouver vehicles

The B.C. government's AirCare program, which monitored vehicle emissions in Metro Vancouver for more than two decades, is being wrapped up.

After 22 years, the emissions monitoring program has done its job, says B.C. government

The B.C. government's AirCare program, which monitored vehicle emissions in Metro Vancouver, is wrapping up after more than two decades checking tailing pipes.

The program is being phased out on December 31 because the technology to reduce emissions from new vehicles has been improving, while the number of vehicles failing the tests has been falling, according to the Ministry of Environment.

"Since the program began in 1992, emissions from light-duty vehicles have decreased 89 per cent from 149,300 tonnes to an estimated 16,500 tonnes for 2014," said a statement issued by the ministry

"Since 2007, both the AirCare failure rate and the number of vehicles failing have steadily dropped – from 14 per cent (58,776 vehicles) to less than eight per cent (34,439 vehicles) as of November 2014."

Earlier this year AirCare began reducing the fee for testing every month in anticipation of the program ending.

But the savings will be short-lived for drivers, who are facing an average increase of $36 this coming year from ICBC on their basic auto insurance.

Fraser Valley air pollution sources - 2005

The following pie chart shows the contribution of each source type to the 147,693 tonnes of smog-forming emissions which were generated in the Lower Fraser Valley in 2005. (Metro Vancouver)