China Daily

Trump demands jobs after signaling fuel economy relief

-

President of the United States Donald Trump is laying out an explicit quid pro quo for automakers: He’ll cut them a break on environmen­tal standards and wants more hiring in return.

“You need to come back and give us big numbers in terms of jobs,” Trump told the chief executive officers of General Motors, Ford Motor and Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV on Wednesday.

The Obama administra­tion’s decision to preserve its fuel economy rules “would have destroyed, or further destroyed, the auto industry”.

Carmakers will now get another year to dispute the fuel mileage and emissions standards, which will be further scrutinize­d by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

The companies cried foul over the EPA failing to collaborat­e with them and expediting a review of the requiremen­ts in the final days of Obama’s term.

Trump’s move to nullify the ruling of Obama’s EPA marks a victory for carmakers including GM, Toyota Motor and Volkswagen, which argued the standards are out of step with market realities.

Low gasoline prices have spurred record demand for SUVs and pickups, and dragged on demand for electric vehicles and fuel-sipping passenger cars.

GM seized on Trump’s announceme­nt, made during a stop through Detroit’s suburbs, by saying it will add 220 new jobs at a transmissi­on plant and retain another 680 workers in the state.

Some positions will be filled or preserved by workers laid off at an SUV factory. The hires were planned before Trump took Donald Trump, president of the United States review of fuel economy rules was “offensive,” he said.

Electric-vehicle maker Tesla Inc’s stance mirrors the Obama administra­tion’s – that the mileage and emissions standards are attainable.

“The recent success of auto manufactur­ers in responding to the growing demand for electric vehicles is proof that the nation’s current fuel economy standards are practical, achievable and having their intended effect,” a spokesman for the automaker led by Elon Musk said in an emailed statement.

Carmakers will make their case on the fuel economy standards to new EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, who’s downplayed how much humans contribute to climate change.

The agencies will restore the original timeline the Obama administra­tion and auto industry agreed to, which was to determine by April 2018 whether standards for 2022 through 2025 are feasible.

“We still support the direction the program is taking us, although some adjustment­s might be necessary,” said Tom Stricker, vice-president of product regulatory affairs for Toyota in North America.

Factors including cheap gasoline prices have changed since the rules took effect, which is “the exact reason both sides agreed to a midterm review in the first place”.

Automakers agreed in 2011 to fuel economy standards set by the US Transporta­tion Department and greenhouse gas emissions rules decided by the EPA and California’s Air Resources Board.

They call for companies to boost the fuel economy of their fleets to an average of more than 50 miles per gallon by 2025.

My administra­tion will work tirelessly to eliminate the industry-killing regulation­s, to lower the job-crushing taxes...”

 ?? JEFF KOWALSKY / BLOOMBERG ?? Employees work on a Cadillac CTS on the production line at General Motors’ plant in Lansing, Michigan, the United States.
JEFF KOWALSKY / BLOOMBERG Employees work on a Cadillac CTS on the production line at General Motors’ plant in Lansing, Michigan, the United States.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong