Trump rolls back Obama fuel policy
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Tuesday weakened one of the nation’s most aggressive efforts to combat climate change, releasing new fuelefficiency standards for cars and trucks that handed a victory to the oil and gas industry.
The new rule, from the Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Transportation, will almost immediately be plunged into litigation as environmental groups and states with strict standards, led by California, plan to challenge it.
“We intend to make sure the backsliding doesn’t reach California’s doorstep,” California Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra said Tuesday in announcing the state’s plan to go to court to defend its tougher standards.
If the administration’s policy survives those fights, it would spare automakers from having to meet ambitious gas mileage and emissions requirements put in place in 2012 under President Obama. It is among the biggest steps the administration has taken to reverse an environmental policy.
The final rule is a dialeddown version of the one the administration originally planned. Instead of proposing zero improvements in fuel efficiency in coming years, it would require automakers to increase fuel economy across their fleets by 1.5% a year, with a goal of achieving an average of 40 miles per gallon by 2026. That’s still a major departure from current rules, which mandate annual increases of 5%, reaching an average of 54 miles per gallon by 2025.
Nearly 900 million more tons of carbon dioxide are expected to be released under the new rule than under the Obama standards, a result of less-efficient cars burning an additional 78 billion gallons of fuel.
“We are delivering on President Trump’s promise to correct the current fueleconomy and greenhouse gas emissions standards,” EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler said in a statement. The administration’s plan, he said, “strikes the right regulatory balance that protects our environment and sets reasonable targets for the auto industry.”
Environmentalists and public health advocates said the change would likely contribute to thousands of premature deaths and asthma attacks. They also criticized the decision to finalize the new standards in the midst of a global pandemic.
But after repeatedly postponing the release of the new rule as it scrambled to justify it, the administration faced deadlines that may have forced its hand. Although Trump had initially said the new standards would affect vehicles in model year 2020, those cars were built under the Obama-era fuel-efficiency standards and are already on the road.
Unless the administration finalized its rollback by April 1, it was in danger of missing the deadline to apply the new standards to the 2022 model year. Also, under the Congressional Review Act, new rules issued after May 19 could be invalidated by the next Congress.
The new standards will apply nationwide. Although California has historically set its own tougher rules on car pollution, the Trump administration last year moved to strip the state of that authority. California and other states that have adopted its standards have sued the administration over the change, and the issue likely won’t be resolved until 2021 at the earliest.
Just hours after the administration unveiled the final rule Tuesday, Mary Nichols, chairwoman of the California Air Resources Board, disclosed that Volvo was in talks with the state to reach a voluntary emissions agreement. Four other automakers — Ford, Honda, Volkswagen and BMW — have already made a deal with the state to preserve emissions standards that are not as tough as the Obama standards but are significantly more ambitious than Trump’s proposal.
The change in fuel-economy standards has been in development since the early days of the administration, when two lobbying groups representing automakers asked then-EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt to relax the Obama-era standards.
The administration’s original proposal would have frozen fuel-economy standards at this year’s levels. That met with a furious response from officials in California and other states, as well as unexpected resistance from some auto companies, which worried the administration was going overboard and dragging them into years of court battles with states.
“The auto industry has consistently called for yearover-year increases in fuel efficiency,” said John Bozzella, president of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, a trade group that lobbies on behalf of the world’s largest car companies. “Looking to the future, we need policies that support a customerfriendly shift toward these electrified and other highly efficient technologies.”