Marin Independent Journal

State deal to reduce emissions completed

- By Coral Davenport The New York Times

WASHINGTON » California on Monday finalized a legal settlement with four of the world’s largest automakers that binds them to comply with its stringent state-level fuel efficiency standards that would cut down on climate-warming tailpipe emissions.

Monday’s agreement adds legal teeth to a deal that California and the companies outlined in principle last summer, and it comes as a rejection of President Donald Trump’s new, looser federal rules on fuel economy, which would allow more pollution into the atmosphere.

Trump was blindsided last summer when the companies Ford, Honda, BMW and Volkswagen announced that they had reached a secret deal with California to comply with that state’s standards, even as the Trump administra­tion was working to roll back Obama-era rules on fuel economy.

After the announceme­nt, Trump escalated his legal and rhetorical attacks on California. He accelerate­d the release of a rule to revoke California’s legal authority to set its own statelevel standards, writing on Twitter that doing so would “produce far less expensive cars for the consumer, while at the same time making the cars substantia­lly SAFER.” His administra­tion dismissed the California deal as a meaningles­s “voluntary stunt.”

But with the publicatio­n of Monday’s legal agreement, the “stunt” is no longer voluntary.

“We went into this voluntaril­y, but it is now binding, it’s enforceabl­e,” said Spencer Reeder, director of government affairs at Audi America, who helped negotiate the agreement on behalf of Volkswagen, Audi’s parent company.

Under the California agreement, the automakers, which together make up about 30% of the U.S. auto market, will be required to increase their average fuel economy from about 38 mpg today to about 51 mpg by 2026. By comparison, the Trump administra­tion’s national rule on auto emissions, which was completed this spring, rolled back a 2012 rule that required automakers’ fleets to average about 54 mpg by 2025. Instead, the fleets now must only average about 40 mpg.

The difference­s in fuel efficiency requiremen­ts will have profound impacts on the climate. Increasing fuel efficiency means vehicles burn less gasoline and emit less greenhouse gas pollution into the atmosphere. Trump’s rollback of the Obama-era rule on fuel economy amounts to the single largest step he has taken to erase his predecesso­r’s policies to fight climate change.

The four automakers’ deal with California amounts to a rebuke to that rollback.

Stanley Young, a spokesman for California’s Air Resources Board, said the agreement achieved “continuous annual reductions in greenhouse gas emissions while saving consumers money.”

And because the deal extends beyond California’s borders, the impact could be substantia­l. Thirteen other states follow California’s state-level standards and have agreed to enforce the new agreement. The fate of the separate standards is expected to be decided by the Supreme Court, which will most likely render judgment on a multistate lawsuit that seeks to nullify the Trump administra­tion’s federal rule or at least to retain states’ authority to set stricter rules.

If former Vice President Joe Biden wins the White House, he will almost certainly seek to restore the Obama-era tailpipe pollution rules and allow California and other states to set tighter rules.

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