EPA head wants car industry, states to
compromise on emissions
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[August 02, 2018]
By Timothy Gardner
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Acting U.S. EPA
chief Andrew Wheeler told lawmakers on Wednesday he would welcome any
deal between the auto industry and states like California that might
result from a long-awaited Trump administration effort to roll back
vehicle emission rules.
The Trump administration's proposal on vehicle fuel efficiency, which
would roll back Obama-era standards, is expected to include plans to
freeze tailpipe emissions limits at 2020 levels through 2026. It is also
expected to revoke California's power to set state emissions rules that
are tougher than the federal government's and mandate the purchase of
electric vehicles.
The proposal, by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department
of Transportation, will be released on Thursday, an administration
official said on the condition of anonymity.
On the eve of the release, Wheeler told a U.S. Senate hearing that any
deal between the auto industry and California and the 12 other states
that follow its lead on emissions limits would be well received, as the
parties digest the proposal and the EPA moves to issue a final rule.
"I would certainly welcome such a compromise," Wheeler said in his first
congressional testimony since former EPA administrator Scott Pruitt
resigned last month under a cloud of ethics controversies.
Wheeler's openness to a deal on fuel efficiency signals a more measured
approach than Pruitt's to rolling back regulations, which could help
ensure that changes will not be quickly reversed in the courts. Wheeler
is a long-time Washington insider, while Pruitt was a former attorney
general of Oklahoma who had sued the EPA many times before being
appointed to run the agency.
The administration's proposal will contain a range of emissions cutting
plans from a "flat line" approach on emissions levels to keeping the
standards that former President Barack Obama had outlined, Wheeler said.
The flat line, apparently referred to the freezing of the emissions
requirements to 2020 levels.
The proposal, which will undergo a public comment period before being
finalized, is expected to intensify a legal battle between the EPA and
California and the states that have adopted its emissions rules.
Eliminating California's electric vehicle mandate would also hurt
automakers like Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> and General Motors Co <GM.N> that are
investing billions of dollars in EVs.
Regulators forecast freezing national emissions standards after 2020
would increase U.S. fuel consumption by about 500,000 barrels of oil per
day an government source said last month. Government regulators also
estimate the regulation, which they name the Safer and Affordable Fuel
Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles rule, will cut traffic deaths by reducing the
cost of new vehicles with enhanced safety features.
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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Acting Administrator
Andrew Wheeler addresses staff at EPA headquarters in Washington,
U.S., July 11, 2018. REUTERS/Ting Shen
A freeze would reduce the average fleet fuel economy standard from a
current projected level of 46.8 miles per gallon in 2026 to 37 miles
per gallon, according to an early draft of the proposal.
Democratic senators slammed the plans to freeze emissions limits and
stop California from issuing separate standards, saying that it
would kill technological incentives to make cars more efficient and
raise fuel bills for consumers.
BIOFUEL REFORM
Senators from corn producing states also criticized Wheeler's agency
over its handling of a waiver program from the nation’s biofuel laws
for small refineries. The EPA, under Trump, has significantly
increased the number of waivers, drawing criticism from farmers that
the agency is undermining the U.S. Renewable Fuel Standard. The
controversial issue cuts across two of Trump’s core constituencies
of farmers in the nation’s heartland and blue-collar workers at
refineries.
Wheeler pledged to bring more transparency to the program and
consider ways to force larger refineries to blend higher volumes of
biofuels like ethanol into their fuel pool to make up for the
gallons exempted at the smaller plants, but he said the agency may
lack the authority.
He also said the agency is considering expanding sales of higher
ethanol blends of gasoline, but was less emphatic than Trump, who
told Iowa farmers last week that they were very close to introducing
the new rule.
(Reporting by Timothy Gardner and David Shepardson, Jarrett Renshaw
in New York and Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Bill Berkrot and
Tom Brown)
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