Daily Democrat (Woodland)

Nissan pulls out of Trump emissions fight

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Nissan says it will no longer support the Trump administra­tion in its fight against California.

DETROIT » Nissan said Friday that it will no longer support the Trump administra­tion in its legal fight to end California’s ability to set its own auto- pollution and gas- mileage standards.

The announceme­nt is another sign that a coalition of automakers backing the outgoing administra­tion could fall apart. General Motors ended its support for the Trump administra­tion’s battle with California on emissions standards last week.

Nissan said it’s pulling out because of confidence that discussion­s between the industry, California and the administra­tion of Presidente­lect Joe Biden “can deliver a common- sense set of national standards

that increases efficiency and meets the needs of all American drivers.”

GM and Nissan were part of a coalition of 13 automakers that joined the Trump administra­tion’s

legal fight. Nissan’s departure leaves Toyota, Fiat Chrysler, Hyundai, Kia, Subaru, Isuzu, Suzuki, Maserati, McLaren, AstonMarti­n and Ferrari in the coalition.

“We continue to support improvemen­ts in fuel economy and a framework that incentiviz­es advanced technologi­es while balancing priorities like the environmen­t, safety, affordabil­ity and jobs,” Nissan’s statement said.

The auto industry already was split before Nissan and GM pulled out of the lawsuit. Five companies — Ford, Volkswagen, BMW, Honda and Volvo — backed California. Most automakers want one national standard so they don’t have to build two versions of each vehicle.

President Donald Trump rolled back Obama- era fuel efficiency and emissions standards, and it’s likely that the Biden administra­tion will end the rollbacks.

 ?? KOJI SASAHARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The Nissan Motor Co. logo is displayed at the global headquarte­rs of Nissan in Yokohama near Tokyo on July 22.
KOJI SASAHARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The Nissan Motor Co. logo is displayed at the global headquarte­rs of Nissan in Yokohama near Tokyo on July 22.

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