UAW president holds White House talks on vehicle emissions
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[February 10, 2021]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - United Auto Workers
(UAW) President Rory Gamble held a virtual meeting last week with a top
White House environmental official as the Biden administration moves to
reverse the rollback in vehicle emissions rules adopted under then
President Donald Trump.
A spokesman for the Detroit-based union confirmed Gamble met with White
House domestic climate change adviser Gina McCarthy and other members of
the Biden Administration.
"It was a very open and positive dialogue," Gamble said in a statement,
praising the Biden administration's "commitment to regular dialogue with
the UAW."
The Biden administration has started discussions with the automobile
sector about reducing greenhouse gas emissions, McCarthy told Reuters
last week.
McCarthy also spoke recently to General Motors Chief Executive Mary
Barra about the Detroit automaker's aspiration to halt sales of all gas-
and diesel-powered vehicles by 2035, the automaker confirmed.
The White House is preparing to begin talks with automakers about
revising vehicle emission standards.
The UAW has also joined forces with automakers, dealers and suppliers to
urge the White House to take "urgent action" over a growing production
crisis sparked by a global semiconductor chip shortage.
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United Auto Workers (UAW) acting president Rory Gamble speaks to
Reuters from his office in Southfield, Michigan, U.S. November 6,
2019. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
In a previously unreported Jan. 19 letter to Biden adviser Brian
Deese, the UAW and the heads of associations representing
automakers, auto dealers and parts manufacturers asked the incoming
administration to consider "urging major silicon wafer foundries to
ramp-up production of automotive grade wafers by either expanding
production capacity or by a short-term rebalancing of a modest
portion of current wafer supply."
The letter, seen by Reuters, added the shortage would result "in
production loss of hundreds of thousands of vehicles, if not more,
in the first quarter alone. These losses, combined with a larger
expected economic impact in Q2 and Q3, require urgent action."
GM said on Tuesday it was extending production cuts at three North
American plants until at least mid-March.
The shortage stems from a confluence of factors as auto
manufacturers, which shut plants for two months during the COVID-19
pandemic last year, compete with consumer electronics manufacturers
for chip supplies.
The chip shortage has affected many automakers, including Toyota,
Volkswagen, Stellantis, Ford Motor Co, Renault, Subaru, Nissan,
Honda and Mazda.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri)
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