Monday, May 18, 2009

US and California Fuel Rules to be Combined By Obama



Apparently, Barack Obama thinks the US fuel standards should match those of California. Obviously a step in the right direction, but how much better off would we be if CARB had held onto its ZEV mandate of the late 90's? We would probably have EV1, Chevy S10 Electrics, Ford Ranger EV's, Honda EV's and Toyota RAV4 EV's all over the place by now. AND, we would have much more improved battery chemistries to boot.

From Automotive News:

The Obama administration was poised to unveil on Tuesday a new auto fuel-efficiency policy that would resolve a major dispute between California and the U.S. government over emissions, industry and other sources said.

The proposal to run from 2012-2016 would maintain a single national standard for fuel economy and give automakers flexibility for meeting it, people with knowledge of the plan said.

The effort would harmonize California's drive to curb greenhouse gasses by reducing tailpipe emissions with the federal approach for determining miles-per-gallon targets based on vehicle size and other attributes, the sources said.

The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the plan, said the strategy calls for raising the overall fuel economy of cars and trucks to 35 mpg by 2016, four years faster than the current schedule.

In March, the government said fuel-economy standards for all U.S. light vehicles will rise 8 percent to an average of 27.3 mpg for the 2011 model year and will cost the industry $1.46 billion to make the change.

Under that timetable, cars will be required to travel an industry average of 30.2 miles on each gallon of fuel, up from 27.5 mpg, and light-truck standards will increase by 1 mpg, to 24.1 mpg, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said. The combined fleet average will rise by 2 mpg.

Those rules were the first fuel-economy mandates set by the Obama administration. They were to use a new system that sets standards for individual models based on their size.

They stem from the December 2007 U.S. energy law that had been scheduled to lift standards 40 percent by 2020, to a fleetwide average of at least 35 mpg.

In January, President George W. Bush decided not to establish the first phase of that increase because of the industry's financial straits and passed the decision to Obama. Because of those financial pressures, the administration postponed making any reqirements beyond the 2011 model year, Charles Territo, a spokesman for the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, said in March.

Federal law requires NHTSA to give automakers at least 18 months lead time before imposing higher standards under the corporate average fuel economy program.

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