Obama unveils mpg rule, gets broad support
Change driven by 30 percent cut in CO2; will cost $1,300 per vehicle
![]() Lucy Nicholson / Reuters file California's push for cuts in smog and greenhouse gas emissions stems from congested cities like Los Angeles. That push was also the driving force behind a new federal standard worked up by the Obama administration. |
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WASHINGTON - Joined by an uncommon alliance of auto executives, union leaders and environmental activists, President Barack Obama on Tuesday announced a national program to cut new vehicle carbon emissions and raise mileage by 30 percent, while also reducing oil needs and changing the kinds of cars Americans buy.
"This gathering is all the more extraordinary for what these diverse groups — despite disparate interests and previous disagreements — have worked together to achieve," Obama said at a White House ceremony. "For the first time in history, we have set in motion a national policy aimed at both increasing gas mileage and decreasing greenhouse gas pollution for all new trucks and cars."
"The status quo is no longer acceptable," he added. "We have done little to increase fuel efficiency of America's cars and trucks for decades."
Obama said the program would save 1.8 billion barrels of oil "over the lifetime of the vehicles sold in the next five years. And at a time of historic crisis in our auto industry, this rule provides the clear certainty that will allow these companies to plan for a future in which they are building the cars of the 21st century."
The new requirement is estimated to cost consumers an extra $1,300 per vehicle starting in 2016, but drivers will be saving at the pump. Obama estimated that a typical driver would save $2,800 over the lifetime of a car, assuming gasoline costs around $3.50 a gallon by then.
Moreover, the increased miles per gallon should cut greenhouse gas emissions by more than 900 million tons, the equivalent to shutting down 194 coal plants, a senior administration official said Monday.
35.5 mpg fleet average planned
While the 30 percent increase translates to a 35.5 mpg average for both cars and light trucks, the percentage increase in cars would be greater, rising from the current 27.5 mpg standard to 39 mpg starting in 2016. The average for light trucks would rise from 24 mpg to 30 mpg.
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If all goes as planned, by 2016 Americans can expect dozens of hybrid, plug-in hybrid and even all-electric vehicle models instead of the two hybrids — Toyota's Prius and Honda's Civic — that currently get better than 39 mpg in combined highway/city driving.
The national program is expected to be finalized once the Department of Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency draw up specifics, and then those must go through a public review.
California, 13 other states and the District of Columbia had earlier urged the Bush administration to let them enact rules to cut vehicle greenhouse gas emissions by 30 percent. The Bush administration blocked the request and fought a lawsuit, but Obama has decided to adopt key elements of that strategy.
Environmentalists and even the auto industry praised the move. For the industry, it means a single standard rather than a federal rule plus various set by individual states — a much costlier approach for the industry. Automakers also get a bit more flexibility than under the California approach.
"For seven long years, there has been a debate over whether states or the federal government should regulate autos," Dave McCurdy, president of the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, said in a statement. "President Obama's announcement ends that old debate by starting a federal rulemaking to set a national program."
Top auto executives, union leaders, environmentalists as well as Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm and California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger were among those who attended Obama's announcement.
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Will phase in new standards
The California program would have required new cars to get 42 mpg by 2020. The Obama plan sets a 39-mpg benchmark by 2016.
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Administration officials said consumers were going to pay an extra $700, anyway, for mileage standards that had already been approved. The Obama plan adds another $600 to the price of a vehicle, a senior administration official said, bringing the total cost to $1,300 by 2016.
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