Biden's drive for EVs collides with Detroit's profit machines
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[February 15, 2024] By
Joseph White
(Reuters) - The Biden administration and automakers are in the final
stages of negotiating over ambitious new rules to accelerate the
electric-vehicle transition that could cost Detroit's automakers
billions and fuel an election-year clash over climate policy.
The White House could enact proposed Environmental Protection Agency
regulations as soon as March that would mandate dramatic reductions in
tailpipe emissions. The administration proposal would require boosting
U.S. EV market share to 67% by 2032 from less than 8% in 2023.
General Motors, Ford and Stellantis — the European parent of U.S.-based
Ram and Jeep - have warned they cannot profitably transition their
truck-heavy U.S. fleets that quickly, according to a Reuters analysis of
automakers’ sales data and a review of comments to regulators.
The United Auto Workers, which represents about 146,000 workers at the
Detroit Three, has endorsed Biden for re-election. But the union has
told the administration its drive for EVs puts jobs at risk.
Automakers endorsed an earlier administration target to boost EVs to 50%
of new vehicle sales by 2030. Groups representing auto dealers have
joined in criticism of more ambitious targets, citing the slowdown in EV
sales growth.
The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents the Detroit
Three and other established automakers, said the proposals could expose
U.S. automakers to $14 billion in fines for failing to hit the CO2
targets.
Elon Musk and Tesla, the U.S. EV market leader, have countered that the
Biden proposals should be even tougher. In comments on the EPA proposal,
Tesla advocated rules that would push EVs to 69% market share by 2032,
and 100% by 2035.
Biden administration officials, industry representatives and
environmental groups have been meeting this month, according to White
House records.
Volkswagen of America chief Pablo Di Si told Reuters earlier this month
"the government has been receptive in listening to us...I hope we'll see
some modification."
The impending rules also have implications for Biden’s re-election
campaign. Michigan, home to thousands of UAW members who build
Detroit-brand trucks and SUVs, is a pivotal state in the contest to
capture the White House.
Former President Donald Trump has made bashing EVs a key campaign
strategy — branding them as a job-killing “hoax” and a capitulation to
China.
Ford, GM and Stellantis, in written comments to the agency, have urged
the administration to reduce potentially costly conflicts among
overlapping regulations administered by the Transportation Department,
Energy Department and the state of California. Those conflicts could
result in "added costs for OEMs that will impact jobs, capital
investments, and
ultimately the success of the transition" to EVs, GM wrote.
GM indicated in public comments that new emissions rules should allow
for a slower ramp up of EV sales toward the 2032 goal. But GM also said
Energy Department proposals to reduce emissions credits generated by EV
sales "will result in disproportionately higher compliance costs for GM
and the Detroit 3."
Stellantis criticized the EPA in its written comments for "completely
ignoring the market benefit of plug-in hybrid electric vehicle"
technology. The automaker plans a plug-in hybrid Ram pickup and
currently sells Jeep and Chrysler plug-in hybrid models.
"In a consumer environment that strongly favors light trucks, Stellantis
introduced plug-in hybrid technology – a decision that is resonating in
the U.S.," the company said in a statement Wednesday.
The EV price war launched by Tesla last year amplified Detroit's
concerns.
“You will have a bloodbath” as legacy automakers struggle to absorb high
EV investment and production costs, Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares told
reporters in February.
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U.S. President Joe Biden drives a Cadillac LYRIQ electric SUV with a
U.S. Secret Service agent in the passenger seat beside him during a
visit to the Detroit Auto Show, to highlight electric vehicle
manufacturing in America, in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., September 14,
2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
LAGGING BEHIND
U.S. electric-vehicle market share trails far behind that of Europe
and especially China, where 29.9% of vehicles sold in January were
EVs or plug-in hybrids.
Non-union Tesla dominates U.S. electric-vehicle sales. The unionized
Detroit automakers trail far behind, with EVs accounting for only 4%
of Ford’s total sales and 3% of GM deliveries.
Stellantis plans to launch eight battery-electric vehicles in the
U.S. by the end of 2024, including an all-electric Ram pickup and
two Jeep EVs.
The problem for Detroit brands in meeting Biden’s proposed emissions
curbs is their outsized reliance on their largest and least
efficient vehicles: mid- and full-sized pickups and truck-based
SUVs. Such vehicles account for 46% of GM’s sales and 59% percent of
those at Ford, a Reuters review of their 2023 sales by model shows.
Those figures do not include the automakers’ smaller, car-based
crossover SUVs. The Ram and Jeep brands exclusively sell pickups and
SUVs and accounted for 77% of Stellantis' U.S. sales last year.
INCENTIVE TO POLLUTE
As Detroit pushes back, environmental groups are countering that a
climate emergency demands an even stricter mandate for all-electric
fleets by 2035.
The Biden administration regulations, if enacted, would mark an
abrupt and painful change for Detroit after years of regulations
that have incentivized the automakers’ focus on trucks and SUVs by
giving these models easier emissions targets to meet.
The rules enabled automakers to build more of the large, heavy,
powerful vehicles many U.S. customers wanted and would pay premium
prices to own.
All told, pickup trucks, sport utility vehicles, and car-based
crossovers accounted for 79% of light vehicle sales in the U.S.
market last year. In 1975, 80% of vehicles sold in the United States
were sedans, according to the EPA.
The agency, in a statement to Reuters, said the average fuel economy
of all U.S. vehicles would be 18% higher than the 26 mpg 2022
average if the fleet had the same ratio of cars to trucks as it had
50 years ago.
Gasoline engines today are far more efficient than those of the
1970s. But automakers have used efficiency gains to provide
customers more horsepower or larger vehicles, EPA data show.
Detroit’s automakers now have the lowest average fuel economy among
14 major manufacturers in the U.S. market. All three fall short of
the industry average 26.9 MPG the EPA projects for 2023 models.
“Improvements to gasoline power technology have been wasted on
moving to larger and more powerful vehicles,” said David Cooke of
the environmental group Union of Concerned Scientists.
TOUGH ROAD AHEAD
Biden’s proposals could require the Detroit automakers to undertake
extensive product or technological overhauls to comply.
GM had eschewed hybrids for the U.S. market as a waste of resources.
In February, however, GM Chief Executive Mary Barra said GM is now
working on plug-in hybrids for the U.S. market in response to rising
sales of hybrids.
Both Ford and GM have struggled to sell their full-sized EV pickups.
Ford in January cut 2024 production of the F-150 Lightning to one
shift, reversing earlier plans to accelerate to three shifts daily.
GM’s new Silverado EV sold just 461 copies last year.
(Reporting by Joseph White in Detroit and David Shepardson in
Washington. Written by Joseph White. Editing by Brian Thevenot and
Anna Driver)
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