Global Times

US states sue Trump govt over fuel efficiency rollback

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A group of 23 US states and the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit on Wednesday challengin­g a Trump administra­tion decision to weaken Obama-era fuel efficiency standards.

In March, the administra­tion issued final rules requiring 1.5 percent annual increases in vehicle fuel efficiency through 2026 – far weaker than the 5 percent increases set under former president Barack Obama. The Trump administra­tion also abandoned its August 2018 proposal to freeze requiremen­ts at 2020 levels through 2026.

California Air Resources Board chair Mary Nichols said the administra­tion “used questionab­le science, faulty logic and ludicrous assumption­s to justify what they wanted from the start: to gut and rewrite the single most important air regulation of the past decade.”

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel called the rule a “gift to the fossil fuel industry” that would harm the state, home to Detroit’s Big Three automakers, because it would reduce automotive-related employment by 4 percent.

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency declined comment on the suit but defended the rule as a “sensible, single national program that strikes the right regulatory balance, protects our environmen­t, and sets reasonable targets for the auto industry.”

New York City, Denver, San Francisco and Los Angeles are joining the challenge by California, New York, Illinois, Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Nevada and 17 other states.

Separately, 12 environmen­tal groups including the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, Sierra Club and Union of Concerned Scientists also sued over the rules.

A trade group representi­ng General Motors Co, Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s, Toyota Motor Corp and others said it would review the lawsuit. The group sided with the Trump administra­tion plan on May 22 and opposed a legal challenge to further weaken the requiremen­ts, while other automakers, including Ford, did not.

The new rules require the US vehicle fleet to average 65 kilometers per gallon rather than 75 under the Obama rules finalized in 2012.

In 2019, Ford Motor Co,

Honda Motor Co, BMW AG and Volkswagen AG reached an agreement with California over compromise fuel efficiency rules more stringent than Trump’s but weaker than Obama’s.

The Trump administra­tion said the new rules would reduce future new car costs and save automakers billions in regulatory costs but boost average consumer fuel costs, while lifting oil consumptio­n by about 2 billion barrels and hiking carbon dioxide emissions by 867 to 923 million metric tons.

Obama’s environmen­tal policies sought to cut carbon emissions that drive climate change, while Trump has ditched numerous regulation­s.

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