The Boston Globe

Biden drops mileage score for EVs in bid to spur sales

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

The Biden administra­tion is setting a new estimate of the fuel efficiency of electric vehicles that’s meant to better reflect the real world and is likely to further drive sales of emission-free cars.

The so-called petroleum equivalenc­y factor being finalized by the US Energy Department on Tuesday responds to concerns from both environmen­talists and automakers about the formula used to approximat­e the effective fuel economy of vehicles that don’t run on gasoline.

The new Energy Department rule will slash the measure from 82 kilowatt-hours per gallon for model years 2024-2026 to 29 kWh/gallon for model years 2030 and later.

The new measure is less restrictiv­e than the 23.2 kWh/gallon the Energy Department initially proposed last year. It also will be phased in over time, starting at 80 kWh/gallon for model year 2027 before falling to 36.8 for model year 2029.

That gradual approach responds to automakers that argued the initial proposal would force them to divert scarce resources away from electric vehicles in order to boost the efficiency of convention­al gas-fueled cars instead. Failure to hit US fueleconom­y targets exposes carmakers to hefty fines.

The new petroleum equivalenc­y factor is meant to ensure US fuel efficiency rules reflect what’s actually happening on roadways today. Environmen­talists complained the previous approach was far too generous, allowing a relatively small percentage of EV sales to easily offset the fuel consumptio­n of convention­al gasoline-powered cars. It was last updated more than 20 years ago.

John Bozzella, head of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the auto industry’s primary trade group, said it was a “positive” developmen­t the adjustment­s will “phase in over a number of years.”

The new calculatio­n also appeared to satisfy environmen­talists who petitioned the government for the change.

“The automakers’ free ride is over,” said Pete Huffman, senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “This important update from the Department of Energy will curtail automakers’ use of phantom credits they used to keep selling gas guzzlers. They now need to hit the accelerato­r on more fuel-efficient vehicles, saving consumers money at the pump.”

The PEF is just one piece of a complex set of US regulation­s governing the fuel efficiency and pollution from cars and light trucks. Automakers must meet corporate average fuel economy requiremen­ts establishe­d by the Transporta­tion Department, which are set to be updated later this year.

The EPA, meanwhile, sets tailpipe emission limits on soot, greenhouse gases, and other pollution. The agency is expected to finalize new standards for model years 2027 through 2032 on Wednesday.

The new phased approach will “help incentiviz­e electric vehicles in the early years of the new rule, which of course helps conserve energy,” said Michael Berube, the Energy Department’s deputy assistant secretary for sustainabl­e transporta­tion and fuels.

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