Business World

Trump moves closer to rolling back vehicle fuel economy rules

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WASHINGTON — New rules enacting President Donald Trump’s reductions in fuel efficiency standards for new vehicles through 2026 moved closer to reality on Tuesday when US agencies sent proposals to the White House for final review.

After more than 17 months of discussion, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion (NHTSA) and Environmen­tal Protection Agency (EPA) submitted proposed rules for 2021 through 2026 model year fuel efficiency to the White House Office of Management and Budget, the agencies said.

Final rules are expected as early as late February or March, officials said.

The administra­tion of former President Barack Obama had required car manufactur­ers to achieve roughly 5% annual increases in vehicle fuel efficiency through the 2026 model year.

The Trump administra­tion proposed in August 2018 freezing fuel efficiency standards at 2020 levels through 2026, erasing the increases the Obama administra­tion enacted, but officials will not finalize that proposal.

“We’re not going to be flat, as was proposed,” Acting NHTSA Administra­tor James Owens told

Reuters in a recent interview. “We’re going to set standards that are reasonable and achievable.”

Several automakers told Reuters they anticipate annual fuel efficiency increases of about 1.5%, much less stringent than the Obama rules, but administra­tion aides said the proposal, which is around 2,000 pages, underwent significan­t revisions.

EPA said the final rules “will benefit all Americans by improving the US fleet’s fuel economy, reducing air pollution, and making new vehicles more affordable for all Americans.”

The administra­tion has argued that the rollbacks are necessary for economic and safety reasons, but California and environmen­talists reject that analysis, saying consumers would spend hundreds of billions more in fuel costs.

The administra­tion’s 2018 proposal would have resulted in average fuel efficiency of 37 miles per gallon (mpg) by 2026, compared with 46.7 mpg under rules adopted in 2012.

The Trump administra­tion’s “preferred option” would have hiked US oil consumptio­n by about 500,000 barrels per day by the 2030s but reduced automakers’ regulatory costs by more than $300 billion. —

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