Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Biden moves to return California’s power to set car pollution rules

-

DETROIT » The U.S. Department of Transporta­tion is moving to reverse former President Donald Trump’s bid to end California’s ability to set its own automobile tailpipe pollution standards.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, which is part of the DOT, said Thursday it is proposing to withdraw a rule meant to stop states from setting their own requiremen­ts for greenhouse gases, zero emissions vehicles and fuel economy.

The change, if approved after the agency takes

public comments, would allow California and 15 states that follow its standards to set their own rules. President Joe Biden has said he will seek one national standard, as was the case under former President Barack Obama. Biden was long expected to back California.

Trump’s 2019 decision to end California’s independen­ce was challenged in court by the state and environmen­tal groups. It also brought fear to the auto industry, which didn’t want the cost of building two different vehicles, one for California and its followers and another for the rest of the country.

Trump’s move split the industry, with most automakers behind him while Ford, Honda, BMW, Volkswagen and Volvo decided to go with California standards. After Biden was inaugurate­d, automakers began withdrawin­g support for Trump’s decision.

The DOT said in a statement that Thursday’s action would establish a regulatory clean slate and reverse “unnecessar­y and potentiall­y unlawful efforts to prevent state action.”

Steven Cliff, NHTSA’s acting administra­tor, said states have led the way in addressing climate change. “NHTSA’s proposed rule would remove unnecessar­y barriers to state leadership in regulating greenhouse gases and other air pollutants that spew from the tailpipes of cars,” he said in a statement.

Trump also rolled back Obama-era fuel efficiency and emissions standards, and it’s likely that the Biden administra­tion will reverse those as well, replacing them with more stringent requiremen­ts.

The department will take comment for one month before the reversal moves through the regulatory process.

 ??  ?? Biden
Biden

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States