U.S. likely to back freezing fuel economy
standards from 2020-26: sources
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[April 28, 2018]
By David Shepardson and Valerie Volcovici
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump
administration is likely to propose freezing fuel economy standards from
2020 through 2026, according to three people briefed on the matter, a
move likely to spark a fight with California and other states backing
tougher vehicle emissions rules.
The administration is circulating a draft proposal that would include
freezing requirements after 2020 as the preferred alternative, but will
include a series of other alternatives, the sources said. The formal
proposal is expected to be unveiled in the coming weeks and has not been
finalized. The Los Angeles Times first reported the plan earlier Friday.
The lengthy draft proposal, led by the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration (NHTSA), is also expected to assert that a 1975 federal
law preempts states from imposing emissions rules, but the
administration is not expected to immediately propose revoking
California's waiver under the Clean Air Act to set its own rules.
Automakers want changes to address lower gasoline prices and a shift in
U.S. consumer preferences to larger, less fuel-efficient vehicles. They
want revisions to the Obama standards to make it easier and less costly
to meet targets, which vary depending on the size of vehicles and
whether they are classified as cars or trucks.
The Obama administration’s rules, negotiated with automakers in 2011,
were aimed at doubling average fleet-wide fuel efficiency to about 50
miles (80 km) per gallon by 2025.
The EPA did not comment on Friday but EPA said earlier this month it had
determined the fuel rules through 2025 were not appropriate and would
propose revisions. NHTSA said Friday it is working with EPA on the
proposal. "The agencies intend to take comment on a broad range of
options," the agency said.
Senator Tom Carper, a Democrat, said "the Trump Administration is
crafting a proposal that is dramatically weaker than any automobile
manufacturer has requested and that also deliberately seeks to embark on
a legal collision course with the State of California — a scenario that
automakers, lawmakers and the state of California have all repeatedly
urged the administration to avoid."
President Donald Trump in March 2017 told autoworkers he would revisit
the rules, which he suggested were harming auto jobs. "The assault on
the American auto industry is over,” he said in Michigan.
Earlier this week, two auto trade groups met with White House officials,
including Christopher Liddell, a White House deputy chief of staff, to
discuss the issue, a Trump administration official confirmed.
The White House, California and Transportation Department have held
talks for months in an effort to reach agreement on revisions.
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A truck engine is tested for pollution exiting its exhaust pipe as
California Air Resources field representatives (unseen) work a
checkpoint set up to inspect heavy-duty trucks traveling near the
Mexican-U.S. border in Otay Mesa, California September 10, 2013.
REUTERS/Mike Blake
Automakers, including General Motors Co <GM.N> chief executive Mary
Barra and Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T>, have repeatedly urged the
Trump administration to try to reach agreement with California to
maintain a national program.
California Air Resources Board chief Mary Nichols told Reuters
earlier this month the state was willing to make changes in the
requirements to help automakers comply.
Stanley Young, a spokesman for Nichols, said: "If enacted, this
would harm people’s health, boost greenhouse gas pollution and force
drivers to pay more money at the pump for years."
A group of 12 state attorneys general have threatened to sue if the
Trump administration reverses the Obama-era rules.
On Friday, nearly two dozen Democratic U.S. senators wrote
California and a dozen other states saying they would oppose any
effort by the Trump administration to rescind California's authority
to set state vehicle emissions rules, according to a letter reviewed
by Reuters.
The letter led by Senator Ed Markey and Carper and signed by
Senators Charles Schumer, Elizabeth Warren, Kamala Harris and others
said they "will oppose any unprecedented attack on the California
waiver or on its standards."
EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt on Thursday declined to answer if he
would call for revoking California's waiver, but vowed to work "to
try to achieve commonality and an answer for both California and
those states and our agencies."
(Reporting by David Shepardson; editing by Diane Craft)
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