Houston Chronicle

Trump revokes California’s car fuel rules

State, environmen­tal groups vow fight over right to set mileage goals

- By Michael Biesecker and Adam Beam

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump announced Wednesday that his administra­tion is revoking California’s authority to set auto mileage standards stricter than those issued by federal regulators, a move critics said would result in less fuel efficient cars that create more planet warming pollution.

In a tweet, Trump said his action would result in less expensive, safer cars. He also predicted Americans would purchase more new cars, which would result in cleaner air as older models are taken off the roads.

“Many more cars will be produced under the new and uniform standard, meaning significan­tly more JOBS, JOBS, JOBS! Automakers should seize this opportunit­y because without this alternativ­e to California, you will be out of business,” Trump tweeted.

U.S. automakers contend that without year-over-year increases in fuel efficiency that align with global market realities their vehicles could be less competitiv­e, potentiall­y resulting in job losses. However, most of the industry favors increases in standards that are less than the Obama-era requiremen­ts, saying their consumers are gravitatin­g to gas-guzzling SUVs and trucks rather than buying more efficient cars.

Top California officials and environmen­tal groups pledged legal action on Wednesday to stop the rollback, potentiall­y tying up the issue for years in federal courts. The U.S. transporta­tion sector is the nation’s biggest single source of greenhouse gasses.

“You can’t get serious about climate change unless you are serious about vehicle emissions, said California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat.

It’s not clear yet what the Trump administra­tion will propose as its final fuel-efficiency rules, but in the past it has favored freezing Obama-era mileage standards at 2021 levels. Under the Obama administra­tion requiremen­ts, the fleet of new vehicles would have to average 30 mpg in realworld driving by 2021, rising to 36 mpg in 2025. The current standard is 26 mpg.

Under Trump, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency contends that freezing the fuel economy standards will reduce the average sticker price of new vehicles by about $2,700 by 2025, though that predicted savings is disputed by environmen­tal groups and is more than double the EPA estimates.

Trump’s tweet does not address the money consumers would save at the gas pump if cars got better mileage. A study released by Consumer Reports in August found that the owner of a 2026 vehicle will pay over $3,300 more for gasoline during the life of a vehicle if the standards are frozen at 2021 levels.

Trump’s claim that his proposal would result in a cleaner environmen­t is contrary to his own administra­tion’s estimate that by freezing economy standards U.S. fuel consumptio­n would increase by about 500,000 barrels per day. Environmen­tal groups predict even more fuel consumed, resulting in higher pollution.

The administra­tion argues that lower-cost vehicles would allow more people to buy new ones that are safer, cutting roadway deaths by 12,700 lives through the 2029 model year. But The Associated Press reported last year that internal EPA emails show senior career officials said the freeze would increase highway fatalities, by about 17 deaths annually.

California has 35 million registered vehicles, the most of any state. A dozen other states and the District of Columbia also follow California’s fuel economy standards.

 ?? Frederic J. Brown / AFP/Getty Images ?? Traffic flows in Los Angeles. Air-quality advocates are appalled by the Trump administra­tion’s rollback of the state’s authority to set fuel standards.
Frederic J. Brown / AFP/Getty Images Traffic flows in Los Angeles. Air-quality advocates are appalled by the Trump administra­tion’s rollback of the state’s authority to set fuel standards.

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