The California Air Resources Board, also known as (CARB) is the "clean air agency" in the government of California. CARB was formed in 1967 by combining the Bureau of Air Sanitation and the Motor Vehicle Pollution Control Board and it is a department within the California Environmental Protection Agency.[1]
The stated goals of CARB include attaining and maintaining healthy air quality, protecting the public from exposure to toxic air contaminants and providing innovative approaches for complying with national and state air pollution control rules and regulations.
CARB is governed by a board made up of eleven members appointed by the state's governor.[2]
Five of the members represent the 35 regional air quality control districts in California:
Three of the members must fit into specific categories:
The remaining three members are public members, one of whom must have air pollution control experience or fit into one of the above three specific categories.
CARB has nine major Divisions:[3]
The Planning and Technical Support Division assesses the extent of California's air quality problems and the progress being made to abate them, coordinates statewide development of clean air plans and maintains databases pertinent to air quality and emissions. The Division's technical support work provides a basis for clean air plans and CARB's regulatory programs. This support includes management and interpretation of emission inventories, air quality data, meteorological data and of air pollution dispersion modeling.
The Planning and Technical Support Division has five branches:[4]
The Atmospheric Modeling & Support Section is one of three sections within the Modeling & Meteorology Branch. The other two sections are the Regional Air Quality Modeling Section and the Meteorology Section.[4]
The air quality and atmospheric pollution dispersion models[5][6] routinely used by this Section include a number of the models recommended by the U.S. EPA:[7]
The Section also uses models which were either developed by CARB or whose development was funded by CARB, such as:[7]