Current through Register 2024 Notice Reg. No. 38, September 20, 2024
(a) Applicability.
The requirements of this section shall apply to light-duty zero emission
vehicles (ZEV) and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEV) certified for sale
in California as follows:
(1) At least 40
percent of a manufacturer's 2026 model year ZEVs and 100 percent of a
manufacturer's 2027 and subsequent model year ZEVs shall meet the requirements
of this section.
(2) At least 40
percent of a manufacturer's 2026 model year PHEVs and 100 percent of a
manufacturer's 2027 and subsequent model year PHEVs certified to earn vehicle
values in accordance with title 13, California Code of Regulations (CCR),
section title 13, California Code of Regulations (CCR), section
title 13,
California Code of Regulations (CCR), section
1962.4 shall meet the requirements of
subsections (c)(4)(A)2., (c)(4)(A)4.c. through (c)(4)(A)4.e., and
(c)(6).
(3) The phase-in
percentages of subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) shall be based on the
manufacturer's projected sales volumes for all ZEVs and for all PHEVs projected
to be certified to earn vehicle values in accordance with title 13, CCR,
1962.4, respectively. Manufacturers shall submit phase-in plans demonstrating
compliance with these percentage requirements prior to submittal of a
certification application to the California Air Resources Board (CARB) for any
2026 model year vehicle. Such phase-in plans shall include planned ZEV and
applicable PHEV models, projected sales for each model, designation of which
models will be complying with the applicable requirements of subsections (a)(1)
or (a)(2), and calculation of the resultant phase-in percentages.
(4) A manufacturer may utilize an alternative
phase-in to the required phase-in of subsection (a)(1) or (a)(2) as long as it
satisfies the following two requirements:
(i)
the total compliance calculation for the alternative phase-in schedule
according to the method below must sum to be equal to or greater than 180 by
the end of the 2027 model year, and
(ii) 100 percent of the manufacturer's
vehicles subject to the phase-in must meet the requirements of this section in
2028 and subsequent model years. The total compliance calculation for the
alternative phase-in is the percent of vehicles meeting the requirements of
this section in a given model year per the phase-in plan required in subsection
(a)(3), multiplied by 3 for the 2025 model year, by 2 for the 2026 model year,
and by 1 for the 2027 model year, and then summed together. A manufacturer is
not permitted to utilize 2024 and earlier model year vehicles to satisfy the
total compliance calculation requirements of the alternative phase-in described
in this subsection.
(5)
In lieu of the required phase-ins in subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) or the
alternative phase-ins allowed in subsection (a)(4), small volume manufacturers
may meet the respective ZEV and PHEV requirements on all 2028 and subsequent
model year vehicles.
(b)
Definitions: For this section, the following definitions apply in addition to
the definitions in title 13, CCR, section
1962.4, and associated test
procedures:
"Grid energy", for the purposes of
tracking grid energy into the battery parameters in subsection (c)(4)(D), means
all energy into the battery while connected to grid power (e.g., plugged-in).
Grid energy into the battery shall not include electrical losses between the
grid and the battery (e.g., from onboard charger inefficiency) or energy
directly used by the vehicle without first going into the battery (e.g.,
electricity utilized directly from before or after the on-board charger to
power on-vehicle devices for cabin conditioning, charging control, etc.). For
the purposes of tracking the alternating current power into the vehicle or
on-board charger from off-board charging parameter in subsection (c)(4)(D),
"grid energy" means all energy supplied to the on-board charger.
"Propulsion-related part" means any
original equipment system, component, or part whose failure will directly
impede the ability on a zero-emission vehicle to refuel or recharge the
vehicle, store fuel or energy for the vehicle, propel the vehicle, including
delivering torque to the wheel and tire assembly excluding the wheel and tire
assembly itself, or recover or recoup vehicle kinetic energy, including
components used to control, manage, or thermally manage such propulsion
components. These include vehicle high voltage batteries, drive motors, wheel
motors, inverters, converters, on-board charging system components, fuel cell
stack components, refueling and fuel tank components, fuel cell air and fuel
delivery components, regenerative braking system components, and the power
electronics, electronic control units, and thermal management systems of such
components and systems providing propulsion, thermal management, recharging and
energy storage, conversion, and related diagnosis within the vehicle. Advanced
driver assistance systems and safety-related components and systems are not
considered "propulsion-related parts" for the purpose of this
regulation.
"Propulsion system active" is the state
where the powertrain (e.g., electric machine) is enabled by the driver (e.g.,
after the power button is pushed for some vehicles, remote activation to
precondition the cabin) such that the vehicle is ready to be used (e.g.,
vehicle is ready to be driven, ready to be shifted from "park" to "drive",
heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) turned on to condition cabin
prior to driving). For purposes of this definition, "the state where the
powertrain is enabled" does not include activations that are not
driver-initiated (e.g., conditions where portions of the vehicle system wake up
to perform off-board charging).
(c) Standardization Requirements
(1) Reference Documents: The following
documents are incorporated by reference into this regulation:
(A) SAE J1962: SAE J1962 "Diagnostic
Connector", July 2016 (SAE J1962).
(B) SAE J1979-3, "E/E Diagnostic Test Modes:
Zero Emission Vehicle Propulsion Systems on UDS (ZEVonUDS)", published draft
June 20, 2022 (SAE J1979-3).
1. SAE J1979-DA,
"Digital Annex of E/E Diagnostic Test Modes", April 2021 (SAE
J1979-DA).
(C) SAE J2012
"Diagnostic Trouble Code Definitions", December 2016 (SAE J2012).
1. SAE J2012DA_201812 "Digital Annex of
Diagnostic Trouble Code Definitions and Failure Type Byte Definitions",
December 2018 (SAE J2012-DA).
(D) ZEV Test Procedures--California Test
Procedures for 2026 and Subsequent Model Year Zero-Emission Vehicles and
Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicles, in the Passenger Car, Light-Duty Truck and
Medium-Duty Vehicles Classes, dated August 25, 2022.
(2) Diagnostic Connector:
(A) A standard data link connector conforming
to the "Type A" specifications and in the location specified for "Type A"
connectors in SAE J1962 shall be incorporated in each vehicle.
(B) The vehicle connector mounting feature
shall withstand a force of 220 Newtons applied to the connector mating area in
the direction of the connecting and disconnecting process without mechanical
and electrical failure. It shall also withstand a force of 220 Newtons applied
in all other axial directions without mechanical failure.
(C) The connector may not be covered in any
way (e.g., may not be covered by a removable panel, dust cap, lid, flap,
door).
(D) Any pins in the
connector that provide electrical power shall be properly fused to protect the
integrity and usefulness of the connector for diagnostic purposes and may not
exceed 20.0 Volts direct current (DC) regardless of the nominal vehicle system
or battery voltage.
(E)
Manufacturers may not equip vehicles with additional diagnostic connectors in
the driver's side foot-well region of the vehicle interior in the area bound by
the driver's side of the vehicle and the driver's side edge of the center
console (or the vehicle centerline if the vehicle does not have a center
console) if the additional connectors can be mated with SAE J1962 "Type A"
external test equipment.
(3) Communications to a Scan Tool: For ZEVs,
manufacturers shall use one of the following standardized protocols for
communication to a scan tool of all required messages. Only one protocol per
vehicle shall be used to report all required messages. For PHEVs subject to
reporting the data parameters identified in subsection (c)(4)(A)2. in
accordance with subsection (a)(2), manufacturers shall report these data using
the same standardized protocol for communication to a scan tool of all required
messages used by the PHEV to comply with title 13, CCR, section
1968.2(g) in lieu
of the requirements of subsections (c)(2) through (c)(4) of this regulation
referencing the use of SAE J1979-3.
(A) SAE
J1979-3 "UDSonCAN". The vehicle shall utilize unified diagnostic services (UDS)
on a controller area network (CAN) as defined in SAE J1979-3. The vehicle shall
respond to functional (i.e., broadcast) and physical (i.e., point-to-point)
request messages from a scan tool in accordance with SAE J1979-3 specifications
except for Service $14 (i.e., clear/reset diagnostic information) where the
vehicle shall respond to functional and may respond to physical request
messages from a scan tool.
(B) SAE
J1979-3 "UDSonIP". The vehicle shall utilize UDS on an internet protocol (IP)
network as defined in SAE J1979-3.
(4) Required Functions: The following
standardized functions shall be implemented in accordance with the
specifications in SAE J1979-3 for the communication protocol used by the
vehicle per subsection (c)(3) to allow for access to the required information
by a scan tool. These functions and data shall be accessible by a scan tool
user and scan tool without the use of any vehicle manufacturer-specific,
user-specific, or tool-specific registration, authentication, authorization,
login, password, certification, or other mechanism that can be used to restrict
or limit user or tool access for any other reason.
(A) Data Stream: The following signals shall
be made available on demand through the standardized data link connector in
accordance with SAE J1979-3 and SAE J1979-DA specifications. The actual signal
value shall always be reported instead of a default or limp home value that the
vehicle manufacturer may have chosen to substitute in place of the actual
signal by the receiving onboard electronic control for use by it or other
onboard electronic control units.
1. For all
ZEVs:
a. vehicle speed, absolute accelerator
pedal position, time elapsed since start of trip, odometer reading, distance
traveled since fault memory last cleared, and number of propulsion system
active trips since fault memory last cleared
b. high voltage battery pack: state of
charge, maximum cell voltage, minimum cell voltage, battery system voltage,
cumulative battery system current for the last 1 second, cumulative battery
system energy (i.e., power via integrated voltage times current) consumption
for the last 1 second
2.
Additionally, for all off-board charge capable vehicles:
a. High voltage battery pack: state of health
(SOH), distance traveled since SOH last updated or reset, quantity of battery
energy remaining in reserve (only required for vehicles designed to initially
hold some battery capacity or energy in reserve and open up access as the
vehicle or battery ages)
b. actual
rate of charge occurring (e.g., kilowatt rate of grid energy into the vehicle
from off-board source), maximum rate of charge the vehicle can accept in its
current state (e.g., given the condition of the vehicle at the time of charging
such as battery temperature and state of charge, the maximum kilowatt rate the
vehicle would accept if the off-board source had unlimited power
capability)
3.
Additionally, for all vehicles equipped with a fuel cell system: cumulative
hydrogen fuel consumed by the fuel cell system in the last 1 second, fuel cell
system voltage, cumulative fuel cell system generated current for the last 1
second, and cumulative fuel cell system electrical energy (i.e., power via
integration of voltage times current) generated from hydrogen for the last 1
second. Reported fuel cell system current, voltage, and electrical energy shall
represent the values at the output of any boost convertor or similar power
conditioning device that receives electricity from the fuel cell stack and in
turn provides conditioned power to the vehicle motors, battery, or other
vehicle loads.
4. Accuracy
a. For purposes of the data stream
parameters, manufacturers shall report the most accurate values that are
calculated within electronic control units on the vehicle.
b. For cumulative battery system current and
battery system energy and for cumulative fuel cell system current and fuel cell
system electrical energy, manufacturers shall use current and voltage
measurements at a sampling rate of no less than 20 hertz to calculate
cumulative current and power for the last 1000 milliseconds, and those
cumulative values shall be updated at a minimum frequency of 1 hertz.
c. For the high voltage battery SOH
parameter, manufacturers shall ensure the reported value is normalized from 0
to 100 percent and correlates to the usable battery energy for the
certification range value as measured in accordance with the ZEV Test Procedure
as applicable. The reported SOH parameter shall be no more than 5 percentage
points higher than the SOH value that corresponds to the measured usable
battery energy.
d. For vehicles
designed to initially hold some battery capacity or energy in reserve and open
up access as the vehicle or battery ages (e.g., to widen the minimum and
maximum allowed state of charge as the battery degrades to counteract or
diminish reduction in battery usable energy), manufacturers shall meet the
requirements of subsection (c)(4)(A)4.c., except that the reported battery SOH
parameter shall be normalized such that 100 percent reflects the usable battery
energy as if the user was allowed to initially access the maximum the system is
designed to ever allow (e.g., a vehicle with a new battery but with the reserve
in the system artificially opened up to its maximum range of authority). Within
10 days upon request by the Executive Officer, the manufacturer shall provide
software or other means for CARB to conduct verification testing to ensure the
accuracy of the SOH parameter to the measured usable battery energy as required
by this section. The manufacturer shall provide any physical items to CARB at
the following address: Chief, Emissions Certification and Compliance Division,
CARB, 4001 Iowa Ave, Riverside, California 92507, and may provide information
or code electronically upon mutual agreement as provided under sections 1633.7
and 1633.8 of the Civil Code.
e.
The manufacturer may limit calculation of an updated battery SOH parameter to
certain usage conditions of the vehicle (e.g., only when a sequence of
sufficient depth of discharge and subsequent charge event occurs) if necessary
to maintain the accuracy of the data parameter within the requirements of
subsection (c)(4)(A)4.c. above. However, a manufacturer may only use conditions
which are technically necessary to ensure robust calculation of the battery SOH
parameter, designed to ensure calculation of an updated value will occur under
conditions which may reasonably be expected to be encountered in normal urban
vehicle operation and use, and designed to ensure calculation of an updated
value will occur for vehicles in a test group, on average, at least once every
4,000 miles.
(B) Fault Codes.
1. For all monitored propulsion-related parts
and systems, fault codes and fault code status shall be made available through
the diagnostic connector in accordance with SAE J1979-3, SAE J2012, and SAE
J2012-DA specifications.
2. For all
monitored propulsion-related part and system fault codes, the vehicle shall
clear diagnostic information and fault codes through a standardized request
through the diagnostic connector in accordance with SAE J1979-3
specifications.
(C)
Vehicle Identification Information
1. Test
Group Identification: On all vehicles, the test group designation pursuant to
title 13, CCR, section
1962.4(i) used
for certification to CARB standards shall be made available through the
standardized data link connector in accordance with the SAE J1979-DA
specifications. Only one electronic control unit per vehicle shall report the
test group.
2. Software Calibration
Identification: For each propulsion-related control unit that reports data
required by subsections (c)(4)(A), (c)(4)(B), or (c)(4)(D), a software
calibration identification number(s) (CAL ID) capable of identifying the
version of software being used by the control unit(s) shall be made available
through the standardized data link connector in accordance with the SAE
J1979-DA specifications. A unique CAL ID shall be used for every
propulsion-related calibration or software set having at least one bit of
different data from any other propulsion-related calibration or software
set.
3. Vehicle Identification
Number: All vehicles shall have the vehicle identification number (VIN)
available through the standardized data link connector in accordance with SAE
J1979-DA specifications. Only one electronic control unit per vehicle shall
report the VIN.
4. Electronic
Control Unit (ECU) Name: The name of each propulsion-related ECU that reports
data required by subsections (c)(4)(A), (c)(4)(B), (c)(4)(C)1. through
(c)(4)(C)3., or (c)(4)(D) shall be communicated in a standardized format in
accordance with SAE J1979-DA.
(D) Vehicle Operation Tracking Requirements:
1. Manufacturers shall implement software
algorithms to individually track and report the following in a standardized
format in accordance with SAE J1979-3 and SAE J1979-DA:
a. Total distance traveled
b. Total number of propulsion system active
trips (where a trip is satisfied whenever the propulsion system active state
has been met for at least two seconds plus or minus one second)
c. Total positive kinetic energy
d. Total electric motor output
energy
e. Total propulsion system
active time
f. Total idle
propulsion system active time (where idle is defined as accelerator pedal
released by driver and vehicle speed less than or equal to 1.6 kilometers per
hour)
g. Total city propulsion
system active time (where city is defined as vehicle speed greater than 1.6
kilometers per hour and less than or equal to 60 kilometers per hour)
h. Total fuel cell system active time (if
equipped with a fuel cell system), defined as the total time in which the fuel
cell stack consumes hydrogen and generates electricity in any mode of
operation
i. Total fuel cell system
energy generated (if equipped with a fuel cell system)
j. Total hydrogen fuel consumed (if equipped
with a fuel cell system)
k. Total
net battery current in the state of propulsion system active
l. Total net energy consumed in the state of
propulsion system active
m. Total
energy into battery (e.g., from regenerative braking) during the state of
propulsion system active
n. Total
grid energy into the battery during off-board charging
o. Total grid energy into the battery from
off-board DC charging
p. If
equipped with the capability to determine alternating current (AC) power into
the vehicle or onboard charger during off-board charging, total grid energy
into the vehicle from off-board AC charging
q. Total battery energy supplied to an
off-board usage (e.g., grid, power port) during propulsion system non-active
operation (e.g., vehicle to home)
r. Average battery temperature during
charging, during propulsion system active, and, if equipped, during non-usage
of the vehicle (i.e., non-propulsion system active, non-charging)
s. Total time at low, mid, and high state of
charges where total time includes cumulative time during propulsion system
active, time during charging, and, if equipped, time during non-usage of the
vehicle (i.e., non-propulsion system active, non-charging)
t. Total number of charge events following a
low, medium, or high depth of discharge of the battery
2. Numerical Value Specifications: For each
data parameter specified in subsection (c)(4)(D)1., the value shall be stored
twice, one representing the lifetime of the vehicle and the second representing
recent operation in accordance with SAE J1979-DA specifications. If any of the
individual lifetime values reach the maximum value defined in SAE J1979-DA, all
lifetime values shall be divided by two before any are incremented again to
avoid software overflow problems.
3. For data parameters specified in
subsection (c)(4)(D), CARB, or a third party contracted directly by CARB, may
not collect data from vehicles owned or leased by a private individual unless
the data is obtained with the voluntary and informed consent of the vehicle
operator.
(5)
Data Reporting Requirements for Over-the-Air Reprogramming
(A) The manufacturer shall collect all
lifetime values stored in the vehicle pursuant to subsection (c)(4)(D) prior to
over-the-air reprogramming of any control module, if any such data would be
erased by such reprogramming.
(B)
For any data collected pursuant to subsection (c)(5)(A), the manufacturer shall
submit a report to the Executive Officer containing the average value and
standard deviation of each collected data parameter for each affected certified
test group as specified in "Data Record Reporting Procedures for Over-the-Air
Reprogrammed Vehicles and Engines Using SAE J1979-2", dated December 15, 2021,
and incorporated by reference. The manufacturer shall submit a separate report
for each unique calibration/software update. The manufacturer shall submit the
report within 75 calendar days of the availability of the calibration/software
update to affected vehicles.
(6) Display of Data to the Vehicle User
(A) Each vehicle shall also be able to
display the battery SOH parameters in subsection (c)(4)(A)2.a. above, in
vehicle, to the vehicle user without the use of any tools.
(B) Each vehicle shall also be able to
display the charge rate parameters in subsection (c)(4)(A)2.b. above, in
vehicle, to the vehicle user during charging without the use of any
tools.
(C) The display in vehicle
of the parameters identified in this subsection (c)(6) shall be:
1. readable by the user with no more than 5
selectable screens or submenu selections needed to access the parameter from
the home or default display/screen;
2. in alphanumeric format;
3. displayed with the same resolution as the
standardized data parameter; and
4.
converted to standard engineering units, as applicable (e.g., percent, miles,
kilowatts).
(d) Certification Documentation. The
manufacturer shall submit documentation related to the requirements of this
section in the manufacturer's certification application in accordance with
title 13, CCR, section
1962.4(i).
(e) Production Vehicle Verification of
Standardized Requirements.
(1) Manufacturers
shall perform testing to verify that all vehicles certified pursuant to CCR,
title 13, section
1962.4, meet the requirements of
subsections (c)(3) and (c)(4) of this section.
(2) Selection of Test Vehicles: Manufacturers
shall perform this testing every model year on one production vehicle for every
unique calibration no later than 60 days after the start of normal production
for that calibration. Manufacturers may request Executive Officer approval to
group multiple calibrations together and test one representative calibration
per group, and may provide documentation to support such request. The Executive
Officer shall approve the request upon finding that the software designed to
comply with the standardization requirements of subsection (c) in the
representative calibration vehicle is identical (e.g., communication protocol
message timing, number of supported data stream parameters) to all others in
the group and that any differences in the calibrations are not material with
respect to meeting the criteria in subsection (e)(3). The Executive Officer
shall notify a manufacturer in writing of the approval or denial of such
request within 30 days of receiving the request.
(3) Test Equipment: For the testing required
in this subsection (e), manufacturers shall utilize an off-board device to
conduct the testing. At least 30 days prior to conducting testing,
manufacturers are required to request Executive Officer approval of the
off-board device that the manufacturer will use to perform the testing. As part
of their requests, manufacturers shall include data, specifications, or
engineering analysis that demonstrate that the off-board device will verify
vehicles' ability to perform all of the required functions in subsection (e)(4)
for the specific vehicle in accordance with SAE J1979-3 specifications. The
Executive Officer shall approve the request upon determining that the
manufacturer has submitted such data, specifications, or engineering analysis.
The Executive Officer shall notify a manufacturer in writing of the approval or
denial of such request within 30 days of receiving the request.
(4) Required Testing:
(A) The testing shall verify that the vehicle
can properly establish communications between all propulsion-related onboard
computers and any scan tool designed to meet the communication protocols
allowed in subsection (c)(3);
(B)
The testing shall further verify that the vehicle can properly communicate the
following information in accordance with SAE J1979-3 and SAE J1979-DA
specifications:
1. All data stream parameters
required in subsection (c)(4)(A) including the identification of each data
stream parameter as supported;
2.
The vehicle identification information in subsection (c)(4)(C);
3. All vehicle operation tracking data
parameters required in subsection (c)(4)(D); and
4. Any fault code (including failure type
byte and status byte) required in subsection (c)(4)(B)1. for a
propulsion-related electronic powertrain control unit designed to report such
fault codes.
(C) The
testing shall also verify that the vehicle can properly respond to a request to
clear propulsion-related fault codes as required in subsection
(c)(4)(B)2.
(5) Reporting
of Results:
(A) The manufacturer shall notify
the Executive Officer within 30 days of identifying any vehicle that does not
meet one or more of the requirements of subsection (c)(4). The manufacturer
shall submit a written report describing the problem(s) identified to the
Executive Officer. The written report shall include proposed corrective action
to remedy the problem(s), including an implementation timeframe, for the
Executive Officer's approval. Factors to be considered by the Executive Officer
in approving the proposed corrective action shall include the severity of the
problem(s), the ability of service technicians to access the required
information, the ability of CARB to access the information needed to conduct
vehicle testing, the impact on equipment and tool manufacturers, and the amount
of time between identification of the problem(s) and implementation of the
proposed corrective action. The Executive Officer shall notify the manufacturer
in writing within 30 days of receiving the written report whether the proposed
corrective action is approved.
(B)
For any vehicle that meets all the requirements of subsection (e)(4), the
manufacturer shall submit a report of the test results and the test log file to
the Executive Officer within 90 days of that vehicle's
testing.
(f)
Electronic submittal. Unless otherwise specified, reports, documentation, and
requests under this Section must be provided to CARB through the electronic
Document Management System available through the website:
https://arb.ca.gov/certification-document-management-system.
(g) Deficient Requirements. For 2026 through
2029 model year vehicles, the Executive Officer, upon receipt of a
certification application from the manufacturer, shall certify vehicles, even
though said vehicles may not comply with one or more of the requirements of
subsections (c)(4)(A)1., (c)(4)(A)3., (c)(4)(C), or (c)(4)(D)1., under the
following conditions. The Executive Officer shall grant certification for 2026
and 2027 model year vehicles that meet at least 50 percent, 2028 model year
vehicles that meet at least 70 percent, and 2029 model year vehicles that meet
at least 90 percent of the total number of applicable individual requirements
within subsections (c)(4)(A)1., (c)(4)(A)3., (c)(4)(C), and (c)(4)(D)1. For
purposes of this calculation, each separately numbered subsection shall count
as an individual requirement (e.g., (c)(4)(A)1.b., (c)(4)(D)1.g.) if it is
applicable to the vehicle (e.g., (c)(4)(D)1.h. only counts as an individual
requirement for fuel cell electric vehicles). The deficient requirements do not
need to be included in any written report pursuant to subsection (e)(4)(D)1.,
provided the manufacturer submitted a list of deficient requirements as part of
its certification application per CCR, title 13, section
1962.4(i)(3)(L).
(h) Enforcement.
(1) In addition to any other failure to meet
a requirement of this section, submitting incorrect information, or failing to
submit required information, is a violation of this section for which violators
are subject to penalty as provided by law. Each failure to comply, including
each incorrect or omitted statement in a submission to the Executive Officer is
a separate violation of this section. A manufacturer is subject to penalties as
provided by law, including those authorized under Health and Safety Code
section 43016 and 43212, for any violations of the requirements of this
section.
(2) CARB shall conduct any
compliance testing, enforcement testing, determination of noncompliance, and
subsequent corrective action in accordance with title 13, CCR, section
1962.7.
(3) For any vehicle requirements under this
section that are not subject to testing, determination of nonconformance, and
corrective action under title 13, CCR, section
1962.7, failure to comply is
subject to corrective action, including recall of vehicles, under title 13,
CCR, section
2109.
(i) Severability. Each provision of this
section is severable, and in the event that any provision of this section is
held to be invalid, the remainder of this section and this article remains in
full force and effect.
1. New
section filed 11-30-2022; operative 11-30-2022 pursuant to Government Code
section 11343.4(b)(3) (Register 2022, No. 48).
Note: Authority cited: Sections 38510, 38560, 38580,
39039, 39600, 39601, 39602.5, 43006, 43013, 43016, 43018, 43023, 43100, 43101,
43104, 43105.5, 43106, 43154, 43211, 43212 and 44036.2, Health and Safety Code.
Reference: Sections 38501, 38510, 38560, 38580, 43006, 43013, 43018, 43023,
43100, 43101, 43102, 43104, 43106, 43154, 43211 and 43212, Health and Safety
Code; Sections 1633.7 and 1633.8, Civil Code; and Engine Manufacturers
Association v. State Air Resources Board (2014) 231 Cal.App.4th
1022.