Twelve U.S. states urge Biden to back phasing out gas-powered vehicle
sales by 2035
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[April 21, 2021] WASHINGTON,
April 21 (Reuters) - The governors of a dozen U.S. states including
California, New York, Massachusetts and North Carolina called on
President Joe Biden on Wednesday to back ending sales of new
gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035, a dramatic shift away from fossil
fuels.
Biden's $2.3 trillion infrastructure plan calls for $174 billion in
spending and tax credits to boost electric vehicles (EVs) and charging
networks but does not call for phasing out gasoline-powered passenger
vehicles.
In a letter that was seen by Reuters, the governors, which also include
those of Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon,
Washington State and Rhode Island, urged Biden to set standards "to
ensure that all new passenger cars and light-duty trucks sold are
zero-emission no later than 2035 with significant milestones along the
way to monitor progress."
They argued that "by establishing a clear regulatory path to ensuring
that all vehicles sold in the United States are zero-emission, we can
finally clear the air and create high-road jobs."
The governors also want Biden to set standards and adopt incentives
aimed at ensuring 100% zero-emission sales of medium-duty and heavy-duty
vehicles by 2045.
The White House did not immediately comment on the governors' letter.
States and some lawmakers hope that Biden's endorsement of a phase-out
date will speed the transition to EVs by users and automakers. EVs
currently make up just 2% of U.S. vehicle sales.
A number of U.S. lawmakers have urged Biden follow California's lead,
which in September said it planned to end sales of new gas-powered
passenger vehicles by 2035. Biden's campaign said last fall he did not
support California's phase-out plan.
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Travelers are stuck in a traffic jam as people hit the road before
the busy Thanksgiving Day weekend in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.,
November 21, 2017. REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski
In March, a group of 71 House Democrats urged Biden to set tough emissions rules
to ensure 60% of new passenger cars and trucks sold are zero-emission by 2030,
while 10 U.S. senators urged Biden "to set a date by which new sales of fossil
fuel vehicles will end entirely."
General Motors GM.N said in January it was setting a goal to end all gasoline
passenger car and truck sales by 2035. Volvo, a unit of Zhejiang Geely Holding
0175.HK, said its entire car line-up will be fully electric by 2030 and Ford’s
F.N European lineup will also be fully electric by 2030.
In their letter, the governors said they want Biden to boost fuel economy
standards rolled back under President Donald Trump and provide states
"substantial funding for investment in charging and fueling infrastructure."
They also urged removal of or raising the EV tax credit limits per manufacturer.
But not everyone has backed a phase-out plan.
Rory Gamble, the president of the United Auto Workers union, has expressed
caution about the shift to EVs, noting it takes fewer workers to build EVs than
gas-powered vehicles and said "workers will disproportionately suffer if we do
not get it right."
He said last month the government must ensure the transition to EVs "is stable,
reliable and creates quality union wage jobs and flexible to market demand not
relying on a one-size fits all solution."
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