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President Obama Overturns Bush Administration on Clean Cars
Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania—President
Barack Obama today directed the Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider
its March 2008 decision to block Pennsylvania and 13 other states from using
tailpipe emission standards to reduce global warming pollution from cars and
light trucks. In Pennsylvania, the standards will reduce global warming
pollution from cars and trucks by 25% by 2025. Nationwide these 14-state
standards will reduce global warming pollution by more than 450 million metric
tons by 2020 – a reduction equivalent to eliminating all of the pollution from
84.7 million of today’s cars for a year, according to a PennEnvironment
analysis of data from the California Air Resources Board. The 14-state
standards will cut gasoline consumption by more than 50 billion gallons by
2020, saving Americans $93 billion at the pump. The President also
directed the Department of Transportation to move forward with standards to
improve the efficiency of vehicles nationwide.
PennEnvironment’s
Nathan Willcox issued the following statement in response:
“Today,
President Obama gave a green light to Pennsylvania and 13 states that the Bush
administration had left idling on clean cars. Making cars both cleaner
and more efficient will reduce America’s dependence on oil and rev up our fight
against global warming. President Obama signaled that his EPA will
partner with the states that have been leading the effort to reduce the
pollution that causes global warming.
“Together
with the commitment President Obama made to clean energy in the economic
recovery package, this announcement will put cleaner cars on the road and
America in the fast lane to reducing our dependence on oil, fighting global
warming, and kick-starting the clean, green economy.”
Background
* PennEnvironment worked to adopt the clean cars standards in Pennsylvania in
2006 including collecting almost a third of the public comments submitted around
the Clean Vehicles program, helping to protect it from some legislators’
efforts to derail the program, and raising awareness through door-to-door
citizen education and media outreach across the state.
* Transportation is the second largest source of global warming pollution in
Pennsylvania.
* The Clean Air Act allows (1) California to set auto emission standards that are
stronger than federal standards (no such standards currently exist); and (2)
other states to adopt California’s auto emission standards. To implement
the standards, EPA must issue California a waiver of federal preemption, an
action the agency has taken many times in the last four decades for innovations like catalytic converters.
* In 2005, California adopted first-of-their-kind standards requiring cars and
light-duty trucks to limit emissions that contribute to global warming.
The standards would cut global warming emissions from passenger vehicles by 30
percent by 2016. A total of 13 other states—Arizona, Connecticut, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington—have adopted the tailpipe
standards. Several additional states are actively considering adopting
the standards.
* In March 2008, in an unprecedented action, the Bush administration denied
California’s waiver request, blocking Pennsylvania and other the states’ global
warming emissions tailpipe standards.
* In 2008, Congress passed the first increase in fuel economy standards in 32
years. The Bush administration never finalized the standards to implement
the increase.