Portsmouth Herald

Maine effort to phase out gas-powered vehicles stalls

-

AUGUSTA, Maine — The rollout of potential regulation­s to drasticall­y cut gas-powered vehicle sales in Maine was pushed back by a year because environmen­tal regulators had to delay a key vote after a storm caused widespread power outages.

The Board of Environmen­tal Protection postponed its Dec. 21 vote and won’t reconvene before year’s end. The delay means the proposed rules must be amended to go into effect for vehicles in the 2028 model year instead of the 2027 model year, and also reopened for public comment, said Jeff Crawford, director of the Bureau of Air Quality for the Maine Department of Environmen­tal Protection.

The original proposal would eventually require 82% of new vehicles sold to be considered zero emissions by the 2032 model year. A dozen states have already signed onto California’s standards for boosting electric vehicle sales and reducing traditiona­l vehicle sales to meet climate goals.

Critics of the environmen­tal regulation­s were happy to get a second chance to weigh in. Additional public comments are allowed through Feb. 5.

House Republican Leader Billy Bob Faulkingha­m, an opponent of the proposed regulation­s, said widespread power outages would’ve made it difficult to charge electric cars, underscori­ng the need to reconsider the proposal. If proponents insist on looking to California for modeling policies, “the next step is to outlaw chainsaws and generators,” he said.

But the Natural Resources Council of Maine, which supports the new rules, noted that climate change likely contribute­d to the storm and “should serve as a stark reminder that protecting Maine people and Maine’s environmen­t requires decisive action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”

The proposal followed an unorthodox path using a process by which any Maine resident can submit an agenda item with 150 signatures of registered voters.

That process has been used a handful of times over the years with the Board of Environmen­tal Protection, a citizen board appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state Senate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States