Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Biden plans an electric vehicle revolution. Now comes the hard part.

- By Coral Davenport and Neal E. Boudette

WASHINGTON — Aggressive rules proposed by the Biden administra­tion to drasticall­y speed up the country’s transition to electric vehicles, and significan­tly cut the auto pollution that is dangerousl­y heating the planet, face several economic, logistical and legal challenges.

The plans, outlined Wednesday by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, are designed to ensure that two-thirds of new passenger cars and one-quarter of new heavy trucks sold in the United States are all-electric by 2032. If enacted as proposed, the regulation­s would mean a quantum leap for the auto industry in the United States, where just 5.8% of new cars and less than 2% of trucks sold last year were all-electric.

Transporta­tion is the single largest source of greenhouse gases generated by the United States, the second-biggest polluting country after China. To head off climate catastroph­e, President Joe Biden has promised to cut the nation’s emissions in half by 2030. Shrinking tailpipe emissions is key to that plan.

But to transform the American automobile industry on the scale it envisions, the Biden administra­tion has to surmount resistance from manufactur­ers and consumers as well as likely legal challenges from those who consider the regulation­s government overreach.

One of the most important aspects of a wholesale transition to electric vehicles has to do with timing.

Although nearly every automaker has already invested billions in electrific­ation, the proposed regulation­s create a dilemma: how to continue to manufactur­e gasoline-powered vehicles, which provide profits, while investing even more in new electric facilities. The aggressive timeline envisioned by the government means that carmakers could also struggle to source the materials required for vehicle batteries, already difficult to obtain.

Market demand is another challenge. Even with federal tax incentives of up to $7,500 for consumers, electric vehicles cost more upfront than convention­al cars and trucks. At the end of 2022, the price of an average new car was $49,507 compared with $61,448 for an electric vehicle, according to the Kelley Blue Book. But even for motivated consumers who can afford electric vehicles, a major stumbling block is what’s known as range anxiety, the fear of being stranded because an electric vehicle cannot reach its destinatio­n on a single charge and not enough fastchargi­ng stations exist.

“This was always a transforma­tion that was going to happen over decades,” said Stephanie Brinley, an automotive analyst at S&P Global. “Putting this aggressive a timeline on it means that there are a lot of things that have to happen consecutiv­ely and concurrent­ly.”

Looming over all of this is an all-butcertain legal and political threat: The new rules could be erased by the courts or a future president.

In many ways, the industry is already moving into an all-electric future. General Motors has set a goal of phasing out the sale of all internal combustion vehicles by 2035. Ford Motor has said it hopes EVS make up half of its sales by 2030. Volkswagen and Stellantis, the company formed through the merger of Fiat Chrysler and Peugeot, have similar targets. Hyundai and Nissan are also ramping up EV production.

But the proposed regulation­s would require even more of automakers.

Ford is on track to spend $50 billion from 2022 through 2026 on its electric vehicle production, with two battery factories under constructi­on in Kentucky, and a third planned in Tennessee, along with an electric truck plant. In February it announced it would build a $3.5 billion battery plant in Michigan with a Chinese partner.

The automaker, however, will most likely need to spend billions more if electric vehicles are to make up two-thirds of the more than 2 million vehicles that it sells in North America annually.

While the Biden administra­tion is betting that electric vehicle costs will come down with mass production, Carlos Tavares, the CEO of Stellantis, said the difficulty of sourcing materials worked against that scenario. “The affordabil­ity is not there because the raw materials are scarce and very expensive, and, I would add, very volatile,” Tavares said at a recent conference in Detroit.

Manufactur­ers are funding their electric vehicle production now from substantia­l profits on their gas-powered trucks and sport utility vehicles. But maintainin­g profitabil­ity as they produce more electric vehicles and fewer gas-powered models will be a challenge, experts say.

GM has said it was not yet making money on its electric vehicles, and Ford recently said its electric division was set to lose $3 billion this year. Both companies hope to turn the corner as they ramp up production of electric models but are also trying to cut costs now, especially in view of the uncertain economy.

GM is in the process of eliminatin­g 5,000 jobs as part of an effort to reduce costs by $2 billion. Ford last year began to trim about 3,000 jobs from its workforce.

“Getting to 50, 60% EVS is certainly possible,” said Sam Abuelsamid, a principal research analyst at Guidehouse Insights. “But this isn’t going to be easy. Not at all.”

And while the pace of electric vehicle purchases is ticking up, many car buyers are uncertain about the new technology.

“We’re making sales to early adopters and easy adopters, but we need to get beyond them,” said John Bozzella, president of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents large U.S. and foreign automakers. “We have a long way to go.”

The most basic hurdle is price.

The federal government will offer buyers up to $7,500 in tax credits for the purchase of an electric vehicle for the next decade, depending on how much of the vehicle was made in the United States. But of the 91 unique electric vehicle models now on the market in the country, fewer than 40 qualify for the tax credits, Bozzella said.

Drivers are also worried about charging electric vehicles. There are currently 130,000 public electric vehicle charging stations in the United States, according to the White House. Under the 2021 infrastruc­ture law, the government will spend $7.5 billion to build 500,000 electric vehicle charging stations along federal highways. But a January report from S&P Global concluded that the nation would need more than 2 million public charging stations by 2030, in addition to private home and garage chargers.

Doug Freeman, an insurance executive in Amesbury, Mass., is an obvious customer for an electric vehicle. He has a 140-mile round-trip commute to work, and currently drives a Chevrolet Volt hybrid. “For me, the green side isn’t No. 1 on the priority list, but the savings on fuel from an electric vehicle would be a lot more than for the average consumer,” he said.

But the model he covets, the Kia EV6, is not made in the United States and doesn’t qualify for the $7,500 tax credit. “Without the credit, it’s $50,000 to $54,000,” Freeman said. “I’ve never paid more than about $33,000 for a car.”

Electric vehicle makers are making use of one way to win over consumers: rentals. In 2021, car rental company Hertz bought 100,000 Teslas, making EVS 20% of its fleet. Most other major car rental companies are also adding electric vehicles to their fleets.

“Rental cars are an excellent way to move EVS from niche to mainstream,” said Drew Kodjak, executive director of the Internatio­nal Council on Clean Transporta­tion, a research organizati­on. “It offers consumers a way to test-drive electric vehicles for a few days, see if they like them, see how they feel about range anxiety,” he said.

By purchasing American-made electric vehicles such as Teslas, the rental companies receive $7,500 in tax credits per car. And the Biden administra­tion has made it easier for the rental companies to resell the cars after a few years: Buyers can receive up to $4,000 in tax credits for the used electric cars.

“Through the incentives and the new laws, the administra­tion has put in place a lot of policies to help automakers get where this regulation says they need to go,” Brinley of S&P Global said.

Even if companies can churn out affordable electric vehicles at a fast pace, and consumers get over range anxiety, the proposed regulation­s are certain to be hit with legal challenges or be subject to shifting politics.

Mike Sommers, president of the American Petroleum Institute, which represents the oil and gas industry, called the regulation­s “a major step toward a ban on the vehicles Americans rely on.”

“As proposed, this rule will hurt consumers with higher costs and greater reliance on unstable foreign supply chains,” Sommers said.

When he was president, Donald Trump relished rolling back the auto pollution regulation­s enacted by his predecesso­r, Barack Obama. A future president could do the same to the Biden regulation­s.

A group of Republican attorneys general, many of them from oil-producing states, has already challenged several of the Biden administra­tion’s climate polices, none of which are as ambitious as the proposed auto pollution regulation­s.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia suggested last week that the group would fight the newest proposals.

Steven Bradbury, who served as the chief legal counsel for the Transporta­tion Department during the Trump administra­tion, said the regulation­s would amount to government overreach.

“They are using this establishe­d, long-standing statute for an entirely new purpose, to force an entirely new goal: the transforma­tion of the industry to electric vehicles,” said Bradbury, a former clerk for Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. “This is clearly driven by the president’s directive to achieve these results. I don’t think you can do this. Congress never contemplat­ed the uses of statutes in this way.”

Jody Freeman, a professor of environmen­tal law at Harvard University, who also served as a climate adviser to Obama, argued that the Clean Air Act had been used successful­ly for years to compel polluting industries to invest in new technologi­es to reduce emissions.

“All of that is part of the normal course of how EPA has set standards,” she said.

But she conceded that it may not be seen that way by the current Supreme Court, consisting of six judges appointed by Republican presidents, including three named to the court by Trump.

“It is a court that is very unsympathe­tic to regulation of any kind, and particular­ly hostile to the EPA,” Freeman said.

 ?? MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE(2021) ?? Workers are pictured June 21, 2021, on the production line at the Lordstown electric truck plant in Lordstown, Ohio. The Biden administra­tion is proposing rules that would ensure that two-thirds of new cars and a quarter of new heavy trucks sold in the U.S. by 2032 are all-electric.
MADDIE MCGARVEY / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE(2021) Workers are pictured June 21, 2021, on the production line at the Lordstown electric truck plant in Lordstown, Ohio. The Biden administra­tion is proposing rules that would ensure that two-thirds of new cars and a quarter of new heavy trucks sold in the U.S. by 2032 are all-electric.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States