Enterprise-Record (Chico)

17 states weigh adopting California’s electric car mandate

- By Steve Karnowski

MINNEAPOLI­S >> Seventeen states with vehicle emission standards tied to rules establishe­d in California face weighty decisions on whether to follow that state’s strictest-in-the nation new rules that require all new cars, pickups and SUVs to be electric or hydrogen powered by 2035.

Under the Clean Air Act, states must abide by the federal government’s standard vehicle emissions standards unless they at least partially opt to follow California’s stricter requiremen­ts.

Among them, Washington, Massachuse­tts, New York, Oregon and Vermont are expected to adopt California’s ban on new gasoline-fueled vehicles. Colorado and Pennsylvan­ia are among the states that probably won’t. The legal ground is a bit murkier in Minnesota, where the state’s “Clean Cars” rule has been a political minefield and the subject of a legal fight. Meanwhile, Republican­s are rebelling in Virginia.

The Minnesota Auto Dealers Associatio­n says its reading of state and federal law is that the new California rules kick in automatica­lly in the state, and it’s making that case in court as it tries to block them.

“The technology is such that the vehicles just don’t perform that well in cold weather,” said Scott Lambert, the trade group’s president. “We don’t all live in southern California.”

Minnesota Pollution Control Agency officials say the state would have to launch an entirely new rulemaking process to adopt California’s changes. And in court filings and legislativ­e hearings, they’ve said they are not planning to do that now.

“We are not California. Minnesota has its own plan,” Gov. Tim Walz said in a statement. He called Minnesota’s program “a smart way to increase, rather than decrease, options for consumers. Our priority is to lower costs and increase choices so Minnesotan­s can drive whatever vehicle suits them.”

Oregon regulators are taking public comments through Sept. 7 on whether to adopt the new California standards. Colorado regulators, who adopted California’s older rules, won’t follow California’s new ones, the administra­tion of Democratic Gov. Jared Polis said.

“While the governor shares the goal of rapidly moving towards electric vehicles, he is skeptical about requiring 100% of cars sold to be electric by a certain date as technology is rapidly changing,” the Colorado Energy Office said in a statement.

Regulators in Pennsylvan­ia, which only partially adopted California’s older

standards, said they won’t automatica­lly follow its new rules. Under Democratic Governor Tom Wolf, Pennsylvan­ia started the regulatory process last year to fully conform with California’s rules, but abandoned it.

Virginia had been on a path to adopting California’s rules under legislatio­n that passed last year when Democrats were in full control of Virginia’s government.

But Republican­s who control the House of Delegates and GOP Gov. Glenn Youngkin say they’ll push to unlink their state.

Minnesota’s auto dealers are trying to make their state’s current rules — and the possibilit­y that they could tighten to incorporat­e California’s new restrictio­ns — an issue for the fall elections. Control of the Legislatur­e and governor’s office are up for grabs, and the dealers hope to persuade the 2023 Legislatur­e to roll back the regulation­s unless they win in court first, Lambert said.

The MPCA, with Walz’s support, adopted California’s existing standards through administra­tive rulemaking last year amid a bitter fight with Republican lawmakers who were upset that the Legislatur­e was cut out of the decision. Legislator­s even tried unsuccessf­ully to withhold funding from Minnesota’s environmen­tal agencies. One casualty was Laura Bishop, who resigned as MPCA commission­er after it became apparent that she lacked the votes in the GOP-controlled Senate to win confirmati­on.

Walz and his administra­tion have framed Minnesota’s Clean Cars rule as a fairly painless way to increase the availabili­ty of electric vehicles and help the state meet its greenhouse gas reduction goals. The rule seeks to increase the offerings of batterypow­ered and hybrid vehicles starting with the 2025 model year by requiring manufactur­ers to comply with California standards currently in force for lowand zero-emission vehicles.

Lambert said the state’s auto dealers don’t oppose electric vehicles. They currently make up 2.3% of new vehicle sales in Minnesota and he expects consumer interest to continue to grow. But the reduced range of battery-powered vehicles in cold weather makes them less attractive in northern tier states, he said. Minnesota’s rules already threaten to saddle dealers with more electric vehicles than their customers will buy, he said, and adopting the California ban would make things worse.

Under federal law, by Lambert’s reading, states have to either adopt California’s

rules in full or follow less stringent federal emission standards. He said they can’t pick and choose from parts of each. And that effectivel­y means there’s a “ban on the books” in Minnesota for sales of new convention­ally fueled vehicles starting with the 2035 model year, he said.

Lambert’s associatio­n was already fighting Minnesota’s existing Clean Car rules in the Minnesota Court of Appeals, and its petition foresaw that California would make the changes it announced late last month. A key issue in whether “any future amendments to the incorporat­ed California regulation­s automatica­lly become part of Minnesota rules,” as the dealers argue.

The MPCA’s attorneys assert that they don’t, and have asked the court to dismiss the challenge. MPCA Commission­er Katrina Kessler has made similar arguments for months, including before a skeptical state Senate committee last March.

Aaron Klemz, chief strategy officer for the Minnesota Center for Environmen­tal Advocacy, which will be filing its own arguments against the dealers in court, acknowledg­ed that the legal landscape is confusing. And he said it’s not clear whether his group will eventually call for Minnesota to follow California’s new ban.

“We haven’t done enough analysis of the California rule to know if we’re going to push for its adoption in Minnesota,” Klemz said. He noted that other issues are coming into play, including incentives for electric vehicles in the Inflation Reduction Act that President Joe Biden recently signed, and the stated intentions by some of the major automakers to go all-electric.

 ?? ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man talks on his phone while sitting in his electric car at a Tesla charging station in Marin City on April 2, 2021.
ERIC RISBERG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man talks on his phone while sitting in his electric car at a Tesla charging station in Marin City on April 2, 2021.
 ?? RICHARD VOGEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A Chevrolet Volt hybrid charges at a ChargePoin­t station at a parking garage in Los Angeles on Oct. 17, 2018.
RICHARD VOGEL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A Chevrolet Volt hybrid charges at a ChargePoin­t station at a parking garage in Los Angeles on Oct. 17, 2018.

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