Bangkok Post

GREEN SCHEME

State accounts for 11% of all US sales

- DAVID SHEPARDSON NICHOLA GROOM

California plans to ban the sale of new petrolpowe­red passenger cars and trucks starting in 2035.

WASHINGTON/LOS ANGELES: California plans to ban the sale of new gasoline-powered passenger cars and trucks starting in 2035 as the top US auto market shifts to electric vehicles to reduce climate-warming emissions.

The move is the most significan­t yet by a US state aimed at ending the use of fossil fuel-burning internal combustion engines, and clashes with the profossil fuel policies of President Donald Trump’s White House.

Governor Gavin Newsom declared earlier this month that he would step up the state’s already aggressive efforts to combat climate change amid a record wildfire season.

“We are marking a new course,” the Democratic governor told a news conference in Sacramento on Wednesday while standing in front of electric cars produced by automakers that support California’s efforts to reduce vehicle emissions.

Newsom signed his executive order on the hood of a prototype red electric Ford Mustang Mach-E.

“The country’s most-populous state is committing to a firm goal to phase out the sale of new gasoline-powered vehicles by 2035 and is encouragin­g other states to take similar action,’’ he said.

California has a broader goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 80% from 1990 levels by 2050, but in recent years transporta­tion-sector emissions have increased.

The California Air Resources Board (CARB) will turn Newsom’s goal into a legally binding requiremen­t by writing regulation­s to mandate that 100% of in-state sales of new passenger cars and trucks are zero-emission by 2035.

The board also plans to mandate by 2045 that all operations of medium- and heavy-duty vehicles be zero-emission where feasible.

California accounts for about 11% of all US vehicle sales, and many states choose to adopt its green vehicle mandates.

Newsom characteri­sed the move as an economic opportunit­y that would create jobs and boost US auto manufactur­ers.

“If you are an American manufactur­er, how can you compete globally unless you are in that business? Unless you are pushing the boundaries of innovation?” he said.

Trump has sought to bar California from requiring the sale of electric vehicles, while Democratic presidenti­al rival Joe Biden has pledged to spend billions to speed their adoption.

In a statement, White House spokesman Judd Deere called the move “alarming” and said it would destroy jobs and raise consumer costs. “President Trump won’t stand for it.”

The president’s economic adviser, Larry Kudlow, said the measure was “very extreme” and he did not see others taking similar action.

“I don’t think we should be taking any steps to get rid of fossil fuels, he told a White House briefing, “and by the way, there should be consumer choice for all automobile­s.”

Biden spokesman Matt Hill said electric vehicles could “create a million good-paying union jobs, dominate a fast-growing market worldwide, and meet the demands of the climate crisis.”

But he added that Biden “thinks of it in terms of incentives and investment­s, not bans.”

California said it was joining 15 countries that have made similar pledges, including Britain.

It’s clean vehicle goals have not always come to pass and in some cases have been pushed back or reworked.

Newsom’s executive order sets a “goal” of no gasoline-powered passenger vehicles after 2035 and does not prevent California­ns from owning gasoline-powered cars or selling them on the used car market.

Environmen­tal groups praised the governor’s action on clean vehicles, but automakers were sceptical.

A group representi­ng major automakers including General Motors Co, Toyota Motor Corp and Volkswagen AG said “neither mandates nor bans build successful markets.”

It noted that electrifie­d vehicles accounted for less than 10% of newvehicle sales in California, which is still the best in the United States.

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