Marin Independent Journal

Biden pushes electric vehicle chargers

- By Aamer Madhani and Tom Krisher

>> President Joe Biden punched the accelerato­r on a battery-powered Hummer on Wednesday, causing the wheels to squeal and the truck to jet forward as he tried in his own way to drive the country toward an electric vehicle future.

The engine was quiet as the president pulled up to a waiting delegation of reporters and officials.

“Anyone wanna jump in the back?” Biden asked.

The president had just toured a General Motors plant in Detroit to showcase how his newly signed $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law could transform the auto industry.

He is highlighti­ng billions of dollars in his giant bipartisan infrastruc­ture deal to pay for the installati­on of electric vehicle chargers across the country, an investment he says will go a long way to curbing planetwarm­ing carbon emissions while creating good-paying jobs. It’s also an attempt to leapfrog China in the plugin EV market. Currently, the

U.S. market share of plug-in electric vehicle sales is onethird the size of the Chinese EV market.

The president noted that the U.S. was not yet leading with electric vehicles, something he believes his infrastruc­ture package can change with plans to build 500,000 charging stations. The Hummer he drove has a starting price of $108,700, as the electric market seems designed so far to serve luxury buyers instead of a mass audience.

“Up until now, China has been leading in this race — that’s about to change,” he said. “We’re going to make sure that the jobs of the future end up here in Michigan, not halfway around the world.”

Two top White House advisers, writing in the Detroit Free Press, said the legislatio­n will help America regain its global competitiv­eness, which has waned, they contend, “after decades of delay and decay.”

“Nobody knows this better than Detroit, which has been at the heart of American industrial strategy in the past and now can

again, which is why President Biden is coming today,” wrote Brian Deese, director of the National Economic Council, and national security adviser Jake Sullivan in an opinion column published Wednesday.

Republican­s, even some of those who voted in favor of the infrastruc­ture package, are criticizin­g Biden for being preoccupie­d with electric vehicle technology at a time when Americans are contending with a spike in gasoline and natural gas

prices.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell took the Senate floor Tuesday to make the case that “the Biden administra­tion doesn’t have any strategic plan to snap its fingers and turn our massive country into some green utopia overnight.”

“They just want to throw boatloads of government money at things like solar panels and electric vehicles and hope it all works out,” said McConnell, one of 19

GOP senators who voted in favor of the infrastruc­ture bill. He added, “American families are staring down the barrel of skyrocketi­ng heating bills, and the Democrats’ response is to go to war against affordable American energy.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki has stressed that the administra­tion is looking at “every tool in our arsenal” to combat high gasoline prices, saying that Biden and his economic team are “quite focused” on the issue.

Biden has asked the Federal Trade Commission to monitor gasoline prices and address any illegal conduct being observed and is engaging with countries and entities abroad like OPEC on increasing supply.

Biden went a step further Wednesday, sending a letter asking the FTC chair to consider investigat­ing “whether illegal conduct is costing families at the pump.” The letter noted an “unexplaine­d” gap in the price of unfinished gasoline and prices for consumers at the pump.

The GM plant Biden visited was slated to be closed in 2018 as the automaker tried to shed excess factory capacity to build sedans as buyers shifted toward SUVs and trucks. But the plant, which built cars with internal combustion engines since it opened in 1985, was rescued a year later and designated Factory Zero to build zero-emissions electric vehicles.

Currently, the 4.1 millionsqu­are-foot plant, which straddles the border between Detroit and the enclave of Hamtramck, is making pre-production versions of the electric GMC Hummer pickup truck.

Next year it will start making a Hummer electric SUV. The plant will start cranking out the Origin, an electric vehicle for GM’s Cruise autonomous vehicle subsidiary, in 2023, and an electric Chevrolet Silverado pickup at an unspecifie­d date.

The plant won’t see much direct impact from the infrastruc­ture spending, but it will benefit from $7.5 billion designated to help build an electric vehicle charging network.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Joe Biden gets into a Hummer at the General Motors Factory ZERO electric vehicle assembly plant in Detroit on Wednesday.
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Joe Biden gets into a Hummer at the General Motors Factory ZERO electric vehicle assembly plant in Detroit on Wednesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States