The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

GM proposes zero-emissions vehicle sales mandate nationwide

- By Tom Krisher AP Auto Writer

DETROIT >> General Motors says it will ask the federal government for one national gas mileage standard, including a requiremen­t that a percentage of auto companies’ sales be zero-emissions vehicles.

Mark Reuss, GM’s executive vice president of product developmen­t, said the company will propose that a certain percentage of nationwide sales be made up of vehicles that run on electricit­y or hydrogen fuel cells.

“A national zero emissions program will drive the scale and infrastruc­ture investment­s needed to allow the U.S. to lead the way to a zero emissions future,” Reuss said.

GM, the nation’s largest automaker, spelled out the request Friday in written comments on a Trump administra­tion proposal to roll back Obama-era fuel economy and emissions standards, freezing them at 2020 levels instead of gradually making them tougher.

California Gov. Jerry Brown, whose state was one of many opponents to the mileage rollbacks filing objections to the Trump plan, stood in front of Interstate 5 in Sacramento on Friday to urge the cause of cleaner cars and condemn the administra­tion’s proposal.

“Foolishly, it mandates gas guzzlers instead of clean and zero-emission vehicles,” Brown told reporters as trucks and passenger traffic roared past. “Wrong way to go, Donald. Get with it. Bad.”

Under a regulation finalized by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency at the end of the Obama administra­tion, the fleet of new automobile­s would have to get 36 miles per gallon (15 kilometers per liter) by 2025, 10 miles per gallon (4 kilometers per liter) higher than the current requiremen­t.

But the Trump administra­tion’s preferred plan is to freeze the standards starting in 2021. Administra­tion officials say waiving the tougher fuel efficiency requiremen­ts would make vehicles more affordable, which would get safer cars into consumer hands more quickly.

GM on Thursday said it doesn’t support the freeze, but wants flexibilit­y to deal with consumers’ shift from cars to less-efficient SUVs and trucks.

Its proposed requiremen­t would be based on current standards now required in California and nine other states. Under those rules, GM must sell a minimum of around 2,200 fully electric vehicles in California this year, or about 1.1 percent of the roughly 200,000 cars, trucks and SUVs that it normally sells in the state each year.

California sets the requiremen­ts based on a complex formula that considers the total number of vehicles sold by an automaker and gives credits for fully electric vehicle sales and partial credits for plug-in gaselectri­c hybrid vehicles. Credits can be banked or sold to other automakers that need them.

GM’s proposal would set lower zero-emissions vehicle requiremen­ts than California, but spread them to the entire nation. The requiremen­ts would gradually increase until 2025.

Reuss said GM’s proposal is a starting point for discussion­s on

one set of national fuel efficiency and zero-emissions vehicle standards.

“We want really one national set of standards,” he said. “Engineerin­g to multiple standards is very costly and frankly, unnecessar­y.”

Federal and California gas mileage standards have been the same since 2010. But if President Donald Trump’s administra­tion ends up relaxing the requiremen­ts, it could create two standards, one for California and states that follow it, and another for

the rest of the nation.

California, whose unique authority to set its own vehicle emissions standards would be rolled back under the administra­tion’s proposal, submitted more than 400 pages of analysis rejecting the plan and the research behind it.

California argues freezing emissions standards for six model years would exacerbate climate change, depress research in cleaner technologi­es and lead to higher spending on gasoline. It also says the plan endangers the U.S. auto industry by allowing other countries to take the lead in developing affordable electric vehicles and batteries.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? General Motors says it will ask the federal government for one national gas mileage standard, including a requiremen­t that a percentage of auto companies’ sales be zero-emissions vehicles.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS General Motors says it will ask the federal government for one national gas mileage standard, including a requiremen­t that a percentage of auto companies’ sales be zero-emissions vehicles.

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