35.5mpg by 2016 as per Obama

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old 05-19-2009, 07:43 AM
  #1  
1.0 BAR
Thread Starter
 
Turbo News's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 293
Post 35.5mpg by 2016 as per Obama

The Obama administration will unveil national tailpipe emissions standards and mileage requirements Tuesday, which will force automakers to dramatically boost the efficiency of vehicles by 2016 to a fleet-wide average of 35.5 miles per gallon, but also give them a single national standard.

The program will cost automakers $1,300 per vehicle, a senior administration official said — a move that could cost automakers $13 billion to $20 billion annually based on total auto sales. That’s $600 ahead of the prior planned fuel efficiency increases.

Under a compromise, California and 13 other states’ efforts to impose a 30 percent reduction in tailpipe emissions are to be essentially adopted by the Obama administration and extended to the rest of the country. The federal government will set mileage standards that are consistent with those emissions requirements — 39 mpg by 2016 for cars and 30 mpg for light trucks.

Administration officials said the new requirements would save 1.8 billion barrels of oil and eliminate 900 million metric tons of greenhouse gases — equivalent to taking 177 million cars and trucks off the roads.

The move will force automakers to average 35.5 mpg overall by 2016 — four years ahead of a congressional deadline and require the companies to boost efficiency by an average of 5 percent per year. It is the first-ever U.S. regulation of tailpipe emissions, rather than simply setting fuel efficiency standards.

But Congress is planning to offer automakers billions more to help them meet the requirements. A revised 942-page version of a climate change bill released late Monday doubles to $50 billion a program to offer low-cost retooling loans to automakers and parts producers to help produce more fuel-efficient models.

The announcement is a major victory for California, though the state won’t get to run the program it has fought to impose since 2002.

It will also allow manufacturers to apply for government assistance for producing plug-in hybrids, and seek money to buy the expensive batteries that would be the heart of such vehicles. The bill creates new programs to aid electric vehicle production.

GM President and CEO Fritz Henderson and UAW President Ron Gettelfinger are among the auto officials who will be on hand Tuesday, along with Ford Motor Co CEO Alan Mulally and Daimler AG CEO Dieter Zetsche, for President Barack Obama’s Rose Garden announcement.

“GM is fully committed to this new approach,” Henderson said. “As the President has previously said, all stakeholders must come together and act with a common purpose and sense of urgency to address the nation’s energy and environmental priorities.”

James Lentz, president of Toyota Motor Sales, USA, Inc., said the Japanese automaker had long sought a coordinated standard for fuel economy and greenhouse gas emissions. “The big winner is customers,” Lentz said. “A unified national program ensures American consumers will have the choice of vehicles they want and need, as well as the fuel efficiency and low emissions they expect, without the potential confusion of multiple standards.”

Ford also praised the announcement.

California and many other states have long sought to impose their own tailpipe emissions standards, but were stymied by the Bush administration, which refused to grant them a waiver to do so under the Clean Air Act. Automakers fought in court for years to block the standards and lobbied government officials to stop them. The administration won’t immediately act on California’s waiver request, so it is unclear what will happen to the state’s initiative.

The Obama regulation, which is backed by major automakers, will order the Environmental Protection Agency and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration to work together to issue a joint regulation setting the new tailpipe emissions limits and mileage standards by next year

In addition to top officials from Detroit’s Big Three automakers, Gov. Jennifer Granholm and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, are expected to attend Tuesday’s announcement. Automakers will drop their lawsuits as part of the deal.

Officials said NHTSA and the EPA will work together to jointly issue regulations to ensure that the tailpipe emissions and fuel economy regulations are harmonized. Automakers will also be able to push for credits toward meeting tailpipe emissions requirements — as they currently have for fuel economy standards. The two agencies will also use NHTSA’s “footprint,” or attribute-based system, which considers a vehicle’s size, to set emissions requirements — something California’s rules didn’t include.

California officials declared victory.

“The Obama administration has brought together the federal government, the state of California, and the auto industry behind new national automobile emissions standards that follow California’s lead,” said Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., chairwoman of the Senate Environment and Public Works committee. “This is good news for all of us who have fought long and hard to reduce global warming pollution, create clean energy jobs, and reduce our dangerous dependence on foreign oil.”

Automakers get more flexibility to meet the yearly numbers — and more leeway in the early years of compliance. Most importantly, this deal appears to prevent California and other states from setting higher state standards in the future.

The Obama administration has been reviewing California’s request for three months. But the administration has been sympathetic to the concerns raised by automakers that two sets of standards would cause problems.

The deal may finally end a long-running dispute between California and Michigan.

Automakers have said state-by-state regulations would cost them tens of billions of dollars and fought California’s efforts for years — losing in three federal courts.

The new regulations take effect with the 2012 model year. In April, the Obama administration hiked the 2011 model year fuel efficiency standards to a fleet-wide average of 27.3 mpg.

In April 2007, the Supreme Court granted the EPA sweeping authority to regulate tailpipe emissions as a danger to human health. The EPA has proposed declaring tailpipe emissions a threat to human health and held a public hearing Monday on the issue in Virginia.

Greenhouse gas emissions from cars, light trucks and other vehicles in 2006 accounted for nearly 24 percent of U.S. emissions, with 94 percent of those emissions carbon dioxide, according to the EPA. U.S. autos accounted for 4.3 percent of worldwide emissions.



More...
Turbo News is offline  
Old 05-19-2009, 01:26 PM
  #2  
0.5 BAR
 
kev77's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 86
Default

i wonder if this will ever happen or just talk to look good
kev77 is offline  
Old 05-26-2009, 06:53 PM
  #3  
0.5 BAR
 
mad-max98's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2004
Posts: 62
Default

Yeah right, obama is the biggest BS talker i ve ever seen
mad-max98 is offline  
Old 05-27-2009, 10:43 AM
  #4  
0.5 BAR
 
kev77's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 86
Default

lol u do rember the last president right ? the 1 who lied every day. no matter what it cant get any worse.
kev77 is offline  
Old 05-29-2009, 06:43 PM
  #5  
0.5 BAR
 
snowdrift's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: UT, USA
Posts: 78
Default

it could, if obama doesn't actually fix things. currently they are throwing money at companies to try and keep things afloat, but if that fails... the it will def. get worse.

Anyway. as far as i can remember we had cars like the Geo Metro for example that were easily getting 40+mpg. i don't know why people have gone all stupid and can't seem to re-do what has already been done. it's just with all the stupid electrical computer crap and what not they put on things it destroys any efficiency of the current vehicle line up.

oh.. and here's an idea. why the hell don't they just start selling some widely available and decently priced electric cars.
hell the japanese have had fully electric cars for years, but the freakin oil companies run the world, and pay off the gov. to not let anything come through that could hurt them.

If Obama wants to help with mileage on cars he should say screw the oil companies and bring in freakin electric cars, and the american automakers should pull their heads out and start sellin some too.
The chevy volt seems like it's coming way too late in the game and for too high of a ridiculous price for it to even get them some leeway in the market.
chrysler has crap. ford has a huge foreign market so i'm sure they have the tech. if not the cars for it somewhere out there. they just need to get off their butts and bring it home.

Really.. it's the governments stupid and pointless regs. that keep us from getting better mileage vehicles. We have had the technology for it for over 20 years now, but people are just morons.

It's gonna be years til we're outta this mess, and i'm sure some things will get worse during Obama's prsidency. but i'm sure he'll do his best to fix some things too.
I voted Rep. but I give support for anything Obama can do to improve our craphole economy. I almost didn't vote though, cause i couldn't really see a good out by either candidate. it just feels like it's gonna get worse before it gets better either way.
snowdrift is offline  
Old 06-06-2009, 10:41 AM
  #6  
0.5 BAR
 
marty095's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Posts: 53
Default

people still wont buy those cars, everyone wants an escalade or some other huge piece of ----.
marty095 is offline  
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
HMT-Roger
Auto News
0
10-29-2011 06:58 PM
HMT-Roger
Auto News
0
10-25-2011 07:49 AM
Rendonlxi
General Discussion
10
05-30-2009 09:26 PM
BRIOHATCH
General Discussion
22
07-27-2006 10:25 PM
Kaneda13
General Discussion
23
05-18-2003 01:29 PM



Quick Reply: 35.5mpg by 2016 as per Obama



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:23 AM.