The Mercury News

Nissan pulls out of Trump fight with California

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DETROIT >> Nissan said Friday that it will no longer support the Trump administra­tion in its legal fight to end California’s ability to set its own auto-pollution and gas-mileage standards.

The announceme­nt is another sign that a coalition of automakers backing the outgoing administra­tion could fall apart. General Motors ended its support for the Trump administra­tion’s battle with California on emissions standards last week.

Nissan said it’s pulling out because of confidence that discussion­s between the industry, California and the administra­tion of President- elect Joe Biden “can deliver a common-sense set of national standards that increases efficiency and meets the needs of all American drivers.”

GM and Nissan were part of a coalition of 13 automakers that joined the Trump administra­tion’s legal fight. Nissan’s departure leaves Toyota, Fiat Chrysler, Hyundai, Kia, Subaru, Isuzu, Suzuki, Maserati, McLaren, Aston-Martin and Ferrari in the coalition.

“We continue to support improvemen­ts in fuel economy and

a framework that incentiviz­es advanced technologi­es while balancing priorities like the environmen­t, safety, affordabil­ity and jobs,” Nissan’s statement said.

The auto industry already was split before Nissan and GM pulled out of the lawsuit. Five companies — Ford, Volkswagen, BMW, Honda and Volvo — backed California. Most automakers want one national standard so they don’t have to build two versions of each vehicle.

President Donald Trump rolled back Obama- era fuel efficiency and emissions standards, and it’s likely that the Biden administra­tion will end the rollbacks. Trump also ended California’s unique ability to set its own pollution and efficiency standards, which is being challenged in court. Biden is likely to recognize California’s power, and replace Trump’s rollbacks with more stringent requiremen­ts.

Many automakers, including Nissan and GM, still are supporting Trump in defending the rollback of national fuel efficiency standards.

 ?? KOJI SASAHARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES ?? Automakers, including Nissan and GM, still support the rollback of national fuel efficiency standards.
KOJI SASAHARA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ARCHIVES Automakers, including Nissan and GM, still support the rollback of national fuel efficiency standards.

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