Houston Chronicle

California leads states’ suit over rollback of car emissions rules

Trump administra­tion’s effort is called unlawful

- By Hiroko Tabuchi

A coalition led by California sued the Trump administra­tion over car emissions rules on Tuesday, escalating a revolt against a proposed rollback of fuel economy standards that threatens to split the country’s auto market.

In a lawsuit filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, California and its coalition — 17 other states and the District of Columbia — called the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s effort to weaken auto emissions rules unlawful and accused the agency failing to follow its own rules and of violating the Clean Air Act.

“States representi­ng 140 million Americans are getting together to sue Outlaw Pruitt — not Administra­tor Pruitt, but Outlaw Pruitt,” Gov. Jerry Brown of California said at a news conference, speaking of the EPA administra­tor, Scott Pruitt.

“This is about health, it’s about life and death,” he said. “I’m going to fight it with everything I can.”

California has separately threatened to sue if the EPA challenges a waiver granted by the Obama administra­tion that allows the state to set its own greenhouse gas emissions regulation­s.

The state has long been authorized under the 1970 Clean Air Act to write its own stricter air pollution rules, and a dozen other states have traditiona­lly followed those standards, which are designed to curb earth-warming emissions from cars and light trucks.

In 2012, when the Obama administra­tion set a comprehens­ive set of standards on greenhouse gas emissions and fuel economy for cars and light trucks — aiming to roughly double the average fuel economy of new cars, SUVs and light trucks by 2025 — California agreed to harmonize its own regulation­s with the new federal standards.

But last spring, executives from the Big Three automakers went to the White House to ask for more lenient emissions rules, kicking off an effort by the administra­tion to roll back those standards. The EPA, together with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, has now drafted a new set of regulation­s that would dramatical­ly weaken the Obama-era rules after 2020.

California had said it would stick with the tougher regulation­s, and had threatened to sue should Washington try to challenge its authority to follow its own air pollution rules. Tuesday’s lawsuit was seen as a preemptive move that calls the entire rollback unlawful.

A legal battle with California brings the nation’s auto industry closer to a split into two markets as its legal challenge plays out in court: one that continues to follow stricter rules requiring cars to be more efficient and less polluting than the other.

The 18 jurisdicti­ons joining in Tuesday’s lawsuit represent more than 40 percent of the U.S. auto market, California said. According to its news release, they are: California, Connecticu­t, Delaware, the District of Columbia, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvan­ia, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States