Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Car firms call on Trump to keep emission limits

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WASHINGTON (AFP) - More than a dozen car manufactur­ers, including Ford, General Motors, Toyota, Honda and Volkswagen have officially asked US President Donald Trump not to relax emission limits, to avoid a fragmentat­ion of the car market, US media reported.

Trump’s administra­tion last year proposed to roll back fuel efficiency standards introduced under former president Barack Obama, sparking warnings of a legal fight with California and other states that favor more aggressive environmen­tal policies.

In a letter sent to the White House and revealed by the New York Times on Thursday, the firms called for a compromise between the Trump administra­tion - looking to support the car industry by relaxing emission limits and the country’s most populous state.

A move to water down controls could see California and more than a dozen other states take the matter to court. Manufactur­ers fear a divided and complicate­d US car market would result, in which companies would have trouble making decisions on pricing and what cars to sell.

It is a nightmare for manufactur­ers who warn in the letter to the White House against “an extended period of litigation and instabilit­y.”

When Trump became president, manufactur­ers encouraged him to make emission limits, put in place by the Obama administra­tion, less onerous.

Now though they are concerned at the zeal shown by the White House to go about weakening them.

A similar letter was also sent to the governor of California, also calling for compromise.

But that state and the White House are at each other’s throats over a number of issues - those touching on climate change and the environmen­t in particular.

Discussion­s held between the two parties aimed at finding common ground were halted in February by the White House.

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