The Mercury News

EPA’s finalized tailpipe standards garner broad support

- By Peter Douglas

On March 20th, the Environmen­tal Protection Agency released finalized tailpipe emission standards that will govern the auto industry from 2027 to 2032. The skillfully crafted regulation­s balance the interests of many stakeholde­rs and constitute a major achievemen­t of the Biden Administra­tion. The EPA intends to aggressive­ly steer road transporta­tion away from fossil fuels while acknowledg­ing the fact that the auto industry cannot turn on a dime. The historic regulation­s will reduce tailpipe carbon dioxide targets for newly sold fleets by a whopping 50%, but stringency increases will be relaxed during the first years of the program to give automakers adequate time to electrify their line-ups.

The EPA’s original proposal, published in April of 2023, was praised by environmen­talists but opposed by the Alliance for Automotive Innovation (AAI), a powerful lobbying group that represents the interests of major fullline automakers. The stringency of the tentative proposal was calibrated with an optimistic assumption that two thirds of newly sold light duty vehicles could be battery electric vehicles (BEVs) by 2032. The AAI was quick to point out that the proposal’s rapidly increasing stringency levels set a blistering pace for BEV sales that exceeded ambitious goals articulate­d by President Biden during his first year in office. The AAI’s president and CEO, John Bozzella, characteri­zed the proposal as being “neither reasonable nor achievable in the timeframe proved” and a “de facto BEV mandate.”

Strenuous opposition from automakers represente­d a major new rift with the Biden Administra­tion, but the EPA was well positioned to accommodat­e their concerns. The standard rulemaking process includes a formal procedure for considerin­g stakeholde­r comments, and the agency had solicited specific feedback on defined alternativ­es to its favored proposal. One of those alternativ­es provided slower stringency increases during the early years of the program but reached the same high level of stringency by 2032. This alternativ­e ended up being adopted along with other adjustment­s that granted near-term flexibilit­y to automakers. When the finalized regulation­s were celebrated at a Washington, D.C. ceremony, John Bozzella came to the podium to offer the AAI’s endorsemen­t. He graciously honored the leadership of the EPA and assured the audience that the auto industry remains fully committed to electrific­ation.

Most environmen­tal organizati­ons recognize the unpreceden­ted strength of the finalized emission standards and have not criticized the modest concession­s made to automakers. These groups were well represente­d at the elaborate ceremony, where the stage was adorned with shiny new electric vehicles. Supportive speakers from the environmen­tal community included Amanda Leland, Executive Director of the Environmen­tal Defense Fund, and Albert Gore, Executive Director of the Zero Emission Transporta­tion Associatio­n. Closing remarks were delivered by White House Climate Advisor Ali Zaidi, who spoke eloquently about the power of ingenuity to provide hope as we struggle to mitigate climate change.

The EPA’s ability to hammer out an acceptable compromise on tailpipe emissions stands in stark contrast to the legislativ­e paralysis that plagues the U.S. Congress. President Biden vowed to enact sensible, centrist policies, and his administra­tion’s new tailpipe standards are consistent with that promise.

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