CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEW EPA THREAT TO STATE’S SMOG STANDARDS”
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 2017, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“NEW EPA THREAT TO STATE’S SMOG STANDARDS”
Californians interested in keeping
this state’s toughest-in-the-world standards for automotive pollution heaved a
sigh of relief when the federal Environmental Protection Agency in early August
reversed an earlier decision to delay imposition of new national ozone
standards for at least a year.
That move came after California and 15
other states sued to force EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt to back down, and he
did before his action could take hold. Pruitt’s reaction also gave rise to
optimism among defenders of several other California laws threatened by a
variety of officials named by President Trump.
But now it seems such optimism may
have been premature. For only weeks after his turnabout on new ozone limits
mandated under ex-President Barack Obama, Pruitt began a new process that could
greatly increase automotive smog.
He opened a 45-day public comment
period on a proposed rewrite of standards for carbon emissions and other kinds
of greenhouse gases emitted by cars and trucks, aiming to ease the
pollution-controlling tasks of both carmakers and oil companies.
Pruitt, the former attorney general of
Oklahoma, frequently sided in his prior job with oil companies and others in
lawsuits aiming to eliminate some EPA rules. California Attorney General Xavier
Becerra is now seeking documents in an effort to determine whether Pruitt had
actual conflicts of interest in several actions he’s lately taken that achieve
goals of the lawsuits he formerly pursued against his current agency.
“We are moving forward with an open
and robust review of emissions standards,” Pruitt said as he began the public
comment period during which anyone can react to proposed changes.
The effect of the changes Pruitt seeks
in corporate average fuel economy standards (often called CAFÉ standards) would
cause new emissions produced in the other 49 states to far overbalance cutbacks
in greenhouse gases made under California rules.
It would mark a return to pre-2000s
days when there were major differences between cars sold in California and what
were known as “49-state cars.” Gradually, as other states adopted California’s
rules, many of those differences had disappeared before Pruitt took over.
He has backed off early efforts to
eliminate the California waiver provisions of the federal Clean Air Act, the
law that has let this state maintain tougher pollution standards than the rest
of America since then-President Richard Nixon signed it 47 years ago.
Current federal standards adopted
under Obama created an emphasis on gas/electric hybrids and electric- and
hydrogen-powered cars.
Not surprisingly, the auto industry
likes Pruitt’s latest move, which could result in revoking or greatly revising
today’s standards everywhere but in California. Said Mitch Bainwol, head of the
Auto Alliance group of carmakers, “The administration is fulfilling its
commitment to reinstate midterm evaluation of future fuel economy and
greenhouse gas standards.”
Both environmental and consumer
advocacy groups blasted the EPA action. “EPA is bringing back questions that
have already been asked and answered,” said a statement from Consumers Union,
parent of the Consumer Reports magazine. The group said polls show 90 percent
of Americans want even better fuel efficiency than offered by today’s new cars.
A scaling back of today’s rules would
place America far behind several other countries in seeking reduced dependency
on oil and gasoline. Germany and France, for example, have laws that will ban
all sales of gas-powered cars within the next two to three decades.
A anti-smog rollback could also
threaten California-based electric car companies like Tesla and Faraday, as
well as making white elephants of the statewide string of hydrogen refueling
stations now being partially financed by gasoline taxes via the state Energy
Commission.
It all creates a very uncertain future
for California’s smog standards, which have dramatically improved the state’s
air quality over the last half century.
If the EPA attempts to backtrack on
the existing standards, it’s almost certain California and many other states
would sue to block the move. But with a U.S. Supreme Court dominated by
conservative Republicans, there’s a strong possibility the Trump administration
would prevail.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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