The Fiji Times

Automaker fined $79m

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WASHINGTON - Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV on Wednesday said it faces a $79 million US civil penalty for failing to meet 2017 fuel economy requiremen­ts, as regulators reported more automakers were falling short of US greenhouse gas emissions standards.

The Italian-American automaker said the payment is not expected to have a material impact on its business.

Of 18 major carmakers in the United States, 13 including Fiat Chrysler failed to comply with fuel economy and greenhouse gas emissions standards for the 2017 model year without using credits, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion (NHTSA).

The agency said its review of model year 2017 vehicles showed “automakers falling further behind current standards”.

The 2017 model fleet fell 1-1/2 miles per gallon short of the 33.8 mpg standard based on yearly performanc­e without including credits, NHTSA reported.

The shortfall was 1/2 mile per gallon for the 2016 model year.

NHTSA said more automakers were failing to comply with standards for the 2018 and 2019 model years, “and the potential penalties on automakers, which are passed along to consumers, are expected to continue to increase”.

The Trump administra­tion has used the widening gap between the emissions of automakers’ US fleets, which are skewing toward larger vehicles, and national vehicle CO2 emissions standards to bolster its case for freezing vehicle emissions and mileage standards at current levels through 2026.

Environmen­tal groups and regulators in California and other states are fighting against any rollback in standards, saying tough rules are needed to address climate change and reduce consumer outlays for fuel.

NHTSA and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency are working to finalise as early as next month a rewrite of the Obama administra­tion’s fuel efficiency requiremen­ts, which call for sharp reductions in fleet-wide emissions by 2026.

Fiat Chrysler is paying fines for the shortfall in its domestic passenger car fleet, which includes several front-wheel Jeep and Dodge two-wheel drive SUVs and some sedans and muscle-cars. The automaker killed its slow-selling domestic small and midsize sedans.

After paying $77.3m last year for a 2016 model year fuel-economy shortfall, a Fiat Chrysler spokesman confirmed Wednesday the company had received a letter on the 2017 penalty and has 60 days to pay the fine.

In its report, NHTSA said Fiat Chrysler — which reiterated plans on Wednesday to spend $10 billion through 2022 to develop more than 30 hybrid and electric vehicles — had failed to meet the 2017 minimum “domestic passenger car” requiremen­ts.

The company said it “continues to support and deliver year-over-year fuel-economy improvemen­ts”.

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV on Wednesday said it faces a $79 million US civil penalty for failing to meet 2017 fuel economy requiremen­ts.
Picture: REUTERS Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV on Wednesday said it faces a $79 million US civil penalty for failing to meet 2017 fuel economy requiremen­ts.

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