The Standard (St. Catharines)

Canada to review auto emissions regulation­s as U.S. plans to weaken

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — Canada will review the joint vehicle emissions standards it has with the United States before it decides what to do about the U.S.’s plan to weaken those standards in the coming years.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna will unveil a discussion paper as early as Tuesday to kick-start that review, just days after the White House announced it is going to cancel the required annual increases in emissions standards after 2021.

Canada and the U.S. have been aligned on vehicle emissions for more than two decades. Unless Canada scraps the existing regulation­s and writes its own, which could take at least two years, this country will automatica­lly follow the American plan.

That plan, agreed to in 2012 by Prime Minister Stephen Harper and President Barack Obama, was to compel automakers to make vehicles more fuel efficient each model year between 2017 and 2025. President Donald Trump, however, is now going to freeze the standards as of 2021.

A spokespers­on for McKenna said the review was planned when the regulation­s were adopted, not as a result of the Trump move last week. Caroline Theriault said Canada will look at both environmen­tal and economic impacts in that review and complete it before any decisions are made on how to proceed.

“We are paying close attention to the U.S. mid-term review of vehicle fuel efficiency standards and to the actions of California and other like-minded U.S. states,” she said.

Canadian automakers don’t want Ottawa to make any final decisions on regulation­s here until it’s clear what will happen in the United States. At least 19 state attorneys plan to sue the U.S. government over the rollbacks, including the White House’s goal to eliminate a federal legal waiver that allows states to set standards stricter than the national ones.

“The reality is because we have always followed what the U.S. has done it makes sense to see what comes out of the other end of the U.S. regulatory review process,” said David Adams, president of Global Automakers of Canada.

His group represents 15 automakers which sell cars in Canada and will be part of the review process. Among the variables the government needs to explore, Adams said, are whether consumers have behaved the way government and industry expected when the regulation­s were set, and whether fuel-efficiency technology has been adopted as expected.

“Right now, we’re finding the market is dramatical­ly different than we maybe anticipate­d when the standards were first set,” said Adams.

The biggest change has been the uptick in demand for pickup trucks and SUVs compared to cars. Trucks and SUVs now account for more than two-thirds of auto sales in Canada.

Light-duty gasoline vehicles accounted for about 11 per cent of Canada’s entire greenhouse gas footprint in 2016, the most recent year for which emissions data is available. Canada’s aim to cut emissions to be at least 30 per cent less than they were in 2005 by 2030 requires road transporta­tion to play its part.

If Canada remains aligned with the U.S. on emissions and the U.S. halts improvemen­ts after 2021, the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion last week projected it will add 10 million tonnes to the annual emissions of cars and trucks by 2030, compared to where they would be with the existing standards.

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