Las Vegas Review-Journal

Auto dealership­s call for halt to proposed limits on emissions

- By Alexa St. John

DETROIT — More than 4,700 auto dealership­s across the United States urged President Joe Biden in a letter Thursday to halt the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s efforts to enforce stricter vehicle-pollution standards.

The missive comes weeks before the agency’s expected ruling on its tailpipe-emissions proposal, which addresses both climate change and pollutants that are harmful to health.

It is the second letter that auto dealers have sent to the White

House in two months on the EPA’S upcoming ruling, which could codify the agency’s strictest-ever tailpipe emissions limits, proposed last

April. The dealership­s said Thursday that the Biden administra­tion did not respond to their first letter sent on Nov. 28.

An EPA spokespers­on said the agency cannot comment as the proposal is in the interagenc­y review process.

“President Biden is investing in a future that is made in America by American workers as we position the United States to lead the clean energy future,” a White House spokespers­on said in a statement Thursday. “More Americans are buying EVS every day — with EV sales rising faster than traditiona­l gas-powered cars — as the President’s Inflation Reduction Act makes EVS more affordable and helps Americans save money when driving.”

With the world focused on trying to limit warming to no more than

2.7 degrees above pre-industrial times, the administra­tion has an ambitious goal to cut domestic planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030. Part of its focus is on the transporta­tion sector, 58 percent of the emissions from which come from passenger cars and trucks, according to the EPA. The regulation also limits hydrocarbo­ns, nitrogen oxides, and particulat­e matter into the air. These emissions cause a host of health issues and disproport­ionately affect people who live near heavy traffic.

The EPA says its proposed regulation­s would require up to two out of every three vehicles sold in the U.S. to be electric by 2032. That’s higher than the administra­tion’s target of 50 percent set two years ago.

The regulation­s, which impact light- and medium-duty vehicles starting with the 2027 model year, could mean a 56 percent drop in projected greenhouse gas emissions from the fleet, relative to existing standards, avoiding nearly 7.3 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions by 2055. They also reduce pollutants harmful to health by 60 percent from the existing standard by model year 2032.

Most automakers around the globe have pledged hundreds of billions of dollars to transition to all-electric new vehicle sales in the coming decade as momentum to address climate change builds. Last year, U.S. EV sales overall grew 47 percent to a record 1.2 million, according to Motorintel­ligence. com. EVS are seeing year-over-year growth, but only hit 7.6 percent of overall market share in 2023.

Given that, thousands of auto dealers say they won’t be able to meet the EPA’S stringent goals.

Nearly 4,000 dealership­s of the nearly 17,000 franchised shops nationwide asked Biden to “tap the brakes” on the EPA proposal in the November letter, referring to the rules as an “electric vehicle mandate.” House Republican­s approved a bill in December to block the pollution limits and also called the rules a mandate.

In this week’s letter, the dealership­s asked Biden to “hit the brakes” entirely, citing several factors that they say indicate slowing EV adoption. The signers said the supply of EVS on dealer lots is twice that of internal combustion engine vehicles, and that they won’t be able to sell EVS at the rate the regulation­s would require.

“It is uncontesta­ble that the combinatio­n of fewer tax incentives, a woefully inadequate charging infrastruc­ture, and insufficie­nt consumer demand makes the proposed electric vehicle mandate completely unrealisti­c,” the letter says.

The EPA’S tailpipe-pollution limits wouldn’t require automakers to sell a specific number of EVS every year.

 ?? David Zalubowski The Associated Press ?? 2024 Mustang Mach-e electric vehicles are displayed at a Ford dealership Sunday in Broomfield, Colo. Epa-proposed regulation­s would require up to two out of every three vehicles sold in the U.S. to be electric by 2032.
David Zalubowski The Associated Press 2024 Mustang Mach-e electric vehicles are displayed at a Ford dealership Sunday in Broomfield, Colo. Epa-proposed regulation­s would require up to two out of every three vehicles sold in the U.S. to be electric by 2032.

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