The Star Malaysia - Star2

Zero emission by 2035

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CALIFORNIA ruled on Aug 25 that all new cars sold in America’s most populous state must be zero emission from 2035, in what was billed as a nation-leading step to slash the pollutants that cause global warming.

The widely touted move has been hailed by environmen­talists, who hope it will prod other parts of the United States to quicken the adoption of electric vehicles.

The rules demand an everincrea­sing percentage of new cars sold to California’s 40 million inhabitant­s produce no tailpipe pollutants, until their total ban in 13 years’ time.

“The timeline is ambitious but achievable: by the time a child born this year is ready to enter middle school, only zero-emission vehicles or a limited number of plug-in hybrids (PHEVS) will be offered for sale in California,” the California Air Resources Board said.

The board, which was tasked with finding a way to implement Governor Gavin Newsom’s order to transition the state’s automotive sector, said the health benefits would be significan­t.

“By 2037, the regulation delivers a 25% reduction in smog-causing pollution from light-duty vehicles.

“This benefits all California­ns but especially the state’s most environmen­tally and economical­ly burdened communitie­s along freeways and other heavily travelled thoroughfa­res.”

From 2026 through 2040 the regulation is expected to result in 1,290 fewer cardiopulm­onary deaths, 460 fewer hospital admissions for cardiovasc­ular or respirator­y illness, and 650 fewer emergency room visits for asthma, it said.

Increasing popularity

California already accounts for the lion’s share of electric vehicles in the United States, with 1.13 million of them on the state’s roads – 43% of the nation’s total.

Their popularity has mushroomed in the years since they were seen as little more than novelty golf carts for tree huggers content to drive no more than a few dozen miles.

Ten years ago only 2% of new cars sold in the state were electric; that figure is now 16%, and Teslas and other premium offerings with a range of hundreds of miles are a common sight on roads around Los Angeles and San Francisco.

Still, the vehicles remain more expensive than their fossil fuelpowere­d equivalent­s and critics say only federal subsidies of up to US$7,500 (RM33,515) make them viable for many buyers.

But supporters say the incentives are necessary short-term supports that will fade away as increased adoption boosts economies of scale and drives down prices.

As the biggest auto market in the US, one manufactur­er cannot ignore, California has an outsized influence in effectivel­y setting national standards.

The recent ruling comes on the heels of a climate law signed the week before by US President Joe Biden, which sets aside hundreds of millions of dollars in incentives for clean energy programmes.

Biden and his Democratic Party are rushing to make up climate policy ground they feel was lost under former president Donald Trump, who yanked the United States out of the Paris Climate Accord and reversed what many environmen­talists viewed as already-weak progress in reducing the fossil fuel emissions that drive global warming.

Newsom, a leading light in the Democratic Party, who is rumoured to have presidenti­al ambitions, welcomed the ruling.

Groundbrea­king roadmap

“California now has a groundbrea­king, world-leading ... roadmap to reducing dangerous carbon emissions and moving away from fossil fuels,” he said.

The reduction in the number of petrol and diesel-powered cars on the roads is equivalent to “915 million oil barrels’ worth of emissions that won’t pollute our communitie­s”.

“With the historic Us$10bil (Rm44.7bil) we’re investing to accelerate the transition ... we’re making it easier and cheaper for all California­ns to purchase electric cars.”

In recent years jurisdicti­ons around the world, notably in Europe, have set their sights on the polluting automobile sector.

Norway is aiming to have all new cars produce zero tailpipe emissions by 2025.

Britain, Singapore and Israel are eyeing 2030, while the European Union wants to end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars by 2035.

Human-caused global warming has already raised average temperatur­es around the planet, affecting weather patterns and worsening natural hazards like wildfires and storms.

Scientists say dramatic action is required to limit the damage, and point to curbing emissions from fossil fuels as key to the battle.

 ?? — afp ?? California already accounts for the lion’s share of electric vehicles in the US, with 1.13 million of them on the state’s roads or 43% of the nation’s total.
— afp California already accounts for the lion’s share of electric vehicles in the US, with 1.13 million of them on the state’s roads or 43% of the nation’s total.

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