The Korea Times

Biden’s new EV rules don’t go fast

- This editorial was published in the Los Angeles Times and distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

It may be tempting to look at new rules finalized Wednesday by the Biden administra­tion boosting sales of electric vehicles as a big step toward slashing climate-changing pollution.

But the Environmen­tal Protection Agency rules are more an incrementa­l move, too weak and slow to respond appropriat­ely to the gravity of the unfolding environmen­tal crisis.

And that’s a shame, because with a divided Congress, administra­tive action is the only way for the federal government to do big things such as protect the public from climate change and pollution.

The administra­tion blew this opportunit­y by caving to pressure from powerful interests during an election year and settling on a watered-down plan that will allow automakers to build more gas-guzzling vehicles for longer and slow down urgently needed pollution cuts.

We’re in the race of our lifetime against climate change and President Biden is driving way below the speed limit.

The final rules impose greenhouse gas pollution limits that will force automakers to ramp up sales of new zero-emission cars and light-duty trucks from about 7 percent of vehicles sold today to more than 67 percent by 2032.

That’s good, of course, but it’s a more gradual requiremen­t than the EPA first proposed, delaying the steepest increases in electric vehicle sales until after 2030 and granting loopholes that make it easier for manufactur­ers to comply.

That’s a mistake at a time when the climate crisis is smacking us in the face, with February marking the ninth consecutiv­e month of record-setting heat on the planet.

Speed matters, after all, in preventing catastroph­ic climate impacts, and the longer we wait to toughen these standards, the more cumulative carbon dioxide emissions we spew into the atmosphere.

The administra­tion’s softening of its vehicle emissions proposal is an election-year gift to the auto industry, which has pushed to weaken the rules so it can keep making more money from gas-fueled models.

It’s also a concession to organized labor, including auto industry workers who are understand­ably fearful about the move to electric vehicles shifting jobs to nonunion factories with lower wages.

The powerful United Auto Workers union praised the version released Wednesday as a “more feasible emissions rule that protects workers building (internal combustion engine) vehicles, while providing a path forward for automakers to implement the full range of automotive technologi­es to reduce emissions.”

But there are better ways to support workers than by blunting the federal government’s most powerful tool to address pollution from transporta­tion, now the largest source of emissions.

Protecting good-paying, union jobs should not have to come at the expense of protecting the environmen­t.

The administra­tion should look to other ways to smooth the transition, like building on the slew of clean manufactur­ing incentives that have begun rolling out under the Inflation Reduction Act, and working to build out the nation’s lackluster vehicle charging network.

Climate change is such an existentia­l threat that even taking one of the biggest federal actions to date to cut emissions can be viewed as a failure for lacking the necessary ambition.

Biden should be doing all he can to get ahead of the climate crisis and dominate the clean energy economy of the future, not easing off the accelerato­r in hopes that it could help him win reelection.

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