Los Angeles Times

Newsom blasts Trump’s plan on emissions

- By Phil Willon and Anna M. Phillips

Governor vows to fight move to end the state’s authority to set auto standards.

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Wednesday criticized the Trump administra­tion’s plan to rescind California’s nearly half-century-old authority to impose tough car emissions standards, vowing to take legal action to block the move.

“I’m confident we will prevail eventually. It will take years and years and years, more uncertaint­y, more anxiety,” Newsom said. “But California will prevail because we’re leaders in this space.”

Newsom’s comments came during a morning news conference with state Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra, California Air Resources Board Chairwoman Mary Nichols, and California Environmen­tal Protection Agency Secretary Jared Blumenfeld.

The U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency is expected to announce plans Thursday morning to overturn a special federal waiver that permits California to set its own strict pollution controls to improve air quality, the foundation of the state’s aggressive efforts to combat climate change.

The EPA originally planned to announce that it would do away with the waiver at an event Wednesday, while President Trump was visiting Los Angeles. But the announceme­nt was delayed, handing the president an opportunit­y to deliver the news himself.

In a series of tweets early Wednesday, Trump said that revoking California’s authority to impose emissions standards will help make cars safer and more affordable, an assertion that Newsom, Becerra and Nichols refuted.

“This will lead to more production because of this pricing and safety advantage, and also due to the fact that older, highly polluting cars, will be replaced by new, extremely environmen­tally friendly cars,” Trump tweeted. “There will be very little difference in emissions between the California Standard and the new U.S. Standard, but the cars will be far safer and much less expensive. Many more cars will be produced under the new and uniform standard, meaning significan­tly more JOBS, JOBS, JOBS! Automakers should seize this opportunit­y because without this alternativ­e to California, you will be out of business.”

In fact, automakers have repeatedly warned the administra­tion that forcing a legal battle with California over car pollution standards could significan­tly damage their bottom line. If the nation’s auto industry is split in two — with some states following California’s standards and others following weaker federal rules — carmakers could find themselves caught in a regulatory nightmare, required to comply with both.

Experts have also raised serious doubts about the administra­tion’s argument that the new policy will make new cars safer. In a study published last year in the journal Science, researcher­s wrote that the administra­tion’s analysis of its own policy proposal “has fundamenta­l flaws and inconsiste­ncies, is at odds with basic economic theory and empirical studies, [and] is misleading.”

Ahead of Wednesday’s news conference, Newsom responded to the president’s claims on Twitter, calling them “simply inaccurate.”

“Your standards will cost consumers $400 billion,” Newsom tweeted. “Result in 320 billion more gallons of oil burned and spewed into our air. And hurt car companies’ ability to compete in a global market. It’s bad for our air. Bad for our health. Bad for our economy.”

The Trump administra­tion’s action threatens to derail California’s effort, signed into law by former Gov. Jerry Brown, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade to levels 40% below those recorded in 1990: The primary driver behind that effort is the state’s goal to help ensure more than 1 million zero-emission vehicles and plug-in hybrids are on the road by 2025.

Brown on Wednesday joined the fray on Twitter, telling the president “your toxic tweets are insufferab­le, but your pillaging of our clean air is criminal.”

Nichols said that while reducing greenhouse gas emissions is crucial for the state and nation, there is much more at stake if the Trump administra­tion prevails.

“Millions of people in California and other states that follow our standards will be breathing dirtier air. They will suffer from more pollution, more asthma cases, more hospitaliz­ations, more premature deaths,” Nichols said.

Becerra said the attorney general’s office will wait until the EPA’s official directive is released before deciding the most effective way to challenge it in the courts. He noted that a similar attempt by President George W. Bush failed after a successful legal challenge.

“Thanks to the state’s regulation­s written under these federal waivers, California has seen reductions of some 400,000 tons of emissions per year between 1970 and 2010,” Becerra said. “California’s standards have encouraged the developmen­t of critical emissions-control technologi­es, many of which have been deployed nationally, not just in our state. Some of California’s standards alone led to stronger standards from the EPA itself.”

California’s clash with the Republican president, who visited the state to raise money for his 2020 reelection campaign, comes just over a month after state officials worked to circumvent the Trump administra­tion’s efforts to relax tailpipe pollution regulation­s by reaching a deal with four major automakers — Ford, Honda, Volkswagen and BMW — to gradually strengthen fueleffici­ency standards. Other automakers have expressed interest in joining the pact.

In a tweet, Trump called California’s agreement with automakers “crazy,” and the U.S. Department of Justice has launched an antitrust investigat­ion into the deal.

The voluntary pact between the California Air Resources Board and automakers covers about a third of the new cars and SUVs sold in the U.S. Under the agreement, the automakers agreed to produce cars that must reach a minimum of about 50 mpg by 2026.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? THE TRUMP administra­tion plans to rescind California’s authority to set its own car emissions rules.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times THE TRUMP administra­tion plans to rescind California’s authority to set its own car emissions rules.

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