Los Angeles Times

Trump steps on the gas pedal

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Of all the Trump administra­tion’s assaults on the environmen­t, there may be none more destructiv­e than the decision to weaken fuel economy standards and let cars, passenger trucks and SUVs burn more gas and spew more pollution.

The fuel economy standards adopted by the Obama administra­tion in 2012 were a central part of the United States’ efforts to reduce the greenhouse gases responsibl­e for global warming. The regulation­s pushed automakers to move faster, requiring the new cars and trucks they sold to average more than 50 miles per gallon by 2025.

The Trump plan announced Thursday would freeze average fuel economy at 37 miles per gallon in 2021. Worse, it seeks to revoke California’s longstandi­ng authority to set its own standards for cleaner vehicles. If successful, the Trump administra­tion would be stunting decades of progress in California and other states toward cleaner, healthier air, and it would be hobbling the worldwide effort to combat climate change.

The administra­tion’s decision to roll back the standards is especially appalling now. We’re already feeling the effects of global warming in more extreme weather events, from prolonged droughts, endless wildfire seasons and unpreceden­ted heat waves to severe hurricanes and floods. And cars and trucks are the nation’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Yet despite the grave risk of delay, the Trump administra­tion has put forth the flimsiest of justificat­ions for the rollback. The plan, developed by the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion, asserts that lower fuel economy standards will save lives — the higher price of more fueleffici­ent vehicles (about $2,300 more per car, they say) encourages some people to continue driving older, less-safe vehicles, the agencies say. That ignores the fact that more fuel-efficient vehicles are cheaper to operate since drivers have to buy less gas.

It also ignores the very significan­t impact President Trump’s threatened tariffs could have on imported cars. Automakers estimate the tariffs could increase the average cost of a car by more than $5,000, dwarfing any potential bump in cost from fuel efficient technology.

Manufactur­ers are clearly capable of producing more fuel efficient vehicles. In fact, most of the major car companies have already pledged to develop more electric vehicles in response to demands by China and European countries.

The Trump administra­tion would leave Americans stuck in gas-guzzling vehicles and breathing smoggy air while the rest of the world enjoys the benefits of automotive innovation. And it would be yet another sign that the current president and his allies in Congress have totally abdicated their responsibi­lity to protect the health of Americans and the environmen­t.

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