Lake County Record-Bee

Newsom orders ban of new gas-powered cars by 2035

- By Rachel Becker

In a dramatic move to tackle climate change, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced Wednesday that he has directed the state to ban new gasoline-powered cars beginning in 15 years.

California has for longer than half a century been a leader in driving new, cleaner car technologi­es with its regulation­s. Today, Newsom raised the stakes: On the hood of a red Ford Mustang Mach-E, an allelectri­c vehicle expected in dealership­s later this year, he signed a new executive order that aims to eliminate new models of traditiona­l cars and put more vehicles powered by clean technologi­es such as fuel cells and batteries on California’s roads.

The order also tackles fossil fuel pollution before it comes out of tailpipes, tasking California lawmakers with putting an end to new fracking permits by 2024. The Newsom administra­tion’s approval of new fracking permits this summer has drawn criticism from environmen­tal groups.

California is already waging a battle with the Trump administra­tion over the state’s power to clean its air and cut greenhouse gases that warm the planet.

Taking aim at California­ns’ beloved cars is a risky political move, especially during an economic crisis. And it’s not clear whether a ban would survive in court, according to some legal experts. Automakers are likely to mount an aggressive campaign to fight the standards.

But Newsom pitched the proposal as an economic boon. California is home to 34 electric vehicle manufactur­ers, he said. And electric vehicles make up the state’s second-biggest export, according to Newsom.

The news comes on the heels of Newsom’s declaratio­n that California is facing “a climate damn emergency.” Wildfires and record- breaking heat have ravaged the state in recent weeks, choking residents with smoke as 3.6 million acres burn. Droughts also are amplified by climate change.

“Our cars shouldn’t make wildfires worse — and create more days filled with smoky air. Cars shouldn’t melt glaciers or raise sea levels threatenin­g our cherished beaches and coastlines,” Newsom said today in a statement.

Newsom’s executive order will not take anybody’s car away. California­ns can still drive and resell their gas-powered vehicles. But it does direct the Air Resources Board to phase out gas-powered passenger vehicles and certain freight trucks by 2035, and medium and heavy duty trucks by 2045.

In the past, an auto industry group called the Coalition for Sustainabl­e Automotive Regulation decried California’s efforts to cut greenhouse gases, siding with the Trump administra­tion in litigation. “With our industry facing the possibilit­y of multiple, overlappin­g and inconsiste­nt standards that drive up costs and penalize consumers, we had an obligation to intervene.”

These carmakers, Newsom said today, will find themselves “on the wrong side of history.”

Assemblyme­mber Phil Ting, a Democrat from San Francisco, applauded the governor’s decision. “The fastest way to make the biggest dent in slowing the effects of global warming is to embrace cleaner cars. Many other countries have already committed to this goal, and I’ve been working tirelessly for years to make this transition happen in California.”

The state has flirted with banning gas-powered vehicles before. Last May, Air Resources Board Chief Mary Nichols alluded to a potential ban if California and the federal government continued to butt heads.

California since the 1960s has taken the lead in curbing emissions from cars and trucks, beginning with mandates that led to catalytic converters cleaning up exhaust that created severe smog. Transporta­tion is the biggest source of greenhouse gas pollution, smog and diesel exhaust in the state.

But the Trump administra­tion has yanked California’s unique authority to regulate greenhouse gas pollution in tailpipe emissions. The move jeopardize­d California’s longstandi­ng zero-emission vehicles program, originally developed to combat smog, which requires automakers to sell zero emission vehicles in the state.

Now, California is fighting to maintain its clean car authority in court. And in the meantime, the state struck a deal with five major automakers — BMW, Ford, Honda, Volkswagen and Volvo. The car companies agreed to recognize California’s authority in return for a more relaxed schedule to meet the state’s greenhouse gas requiremen­ts.

California has already pledged to not buy cars for government fleets from automakers that spurned its clean car deal. And at a meeting with the California Transporta­tion Commission last year, Nichols spoke vaguely of “potentiall­y looking at things like fees, taxes and bans on certain types of vehicles and products.”

But Nichols’ prewritten remarks, obtained by Bloomberg, were starker, saying that federal clean car rollbacks could prompt the air board to look for other ways to curb pollution, including “an outright ban on internal combustion engines.”

At the time, Meredith Hankins, then a Shapiro fellow in Environmen­tal Law and Policy at the UCLA School of Law, told CalMatters that such a ban would be difficult to get past the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

“It may be sort of dead on arrival under this current administra­tion,” Hankins said. And going around the EPA is “an untested legal question.”

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Oakland resident Ed Rogers pumps gas at a Chevron station in Berkeley on July 3, 2019.
FILE PHOTO Oakland resident Ed Rogers pumps gas at a Chevron station in Berkeley on July 3, 2019.

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