Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Trump administra­tion ends auto mileage talks

- By Ellen Knickmeyer and Tom Krisher

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion broke off vehicle mileage standards talks with California on Thursday, moving the two closer to a possible court battle that threatens to unsettle the auto industry.

The White House said the administra­tion, which wants to freeze mileage standards, would now move unilateral­ly to “finalize a rule later this year with the goal of promoting safer, cleaner, and more affordable vehicles.”

California officials and the Trump administra­tion each accused the other of failing to present any good compromise proposal in the mileage dispute, which comes as President Donald Trump feuds with the Democrat-led state over his proposed border wall and his threats to take back federal money.

The administra­tion said last year it wanted to freeze what would have been tougher, Obama-era mileage standards for cars and light trucks. It would be one of a series of rollbacks targeting Obama administra­tion efforts against pollution and climate change.

Under the administra­tion proposal, the standards would be frozen after slightly tougher 2020 levels go into effect, eliminatin­g 10 miles per gallon of improvemen­t to a fleet average of 36 mpg in 2025. As part of the proposed mileage freeze, the administra­tion threatened to revoke California’s legal authority to set its own, tougher mileage standards, waivers granted under the Clean Air Act to help it deal Sen. Tom Carper, D-Del. called administra­tion efforts in the mileage talks “superficia­l and not robust at best.”

with its punishing smog. Thirteen states and the District of Columbia follow California’s mileage standards.

Lawmakers and automakers have urged the two sides to settle, warning that a split could divide the auto market, bring years of court battles and raise costs for automakers.

“This administra­tion’s negotiatio­ns with the State of California over fuel economy and greenhouse gas emissions standards have been superficia­l and not robust at best, or duplicitou­s and designed to fail at worst,” Sen. Tom Carper of Delaware, the top Democrat in the Senate’s Environmen­t and Public Works Committee, said in a statement late Wednesday, as the formal negotiatio­ns breakdown loomed.

“Litigation ... wastes time, money, creates uncertaint­y for American automakers and harms the environmen­t,” Carper said.

California officials say the administra­tion never offered any compromise and that it broke off any contacts around December.

“We concluded at that point that they were never serious about negotiatin­g, and their public comments about California since then

seem to underscore that point,” said Stanley Young, spokesman for the state’s air board.

It’s the latest shot by the White House in its escalating feud with California. The Trump administra­tion earlier in the week said it planned to cancel nearly $1 billion for California’s highspeed rail project and would seek the return of $2.5 billion more. Gov. Gavin Newsom said it was political retributio­n for the state’s role in leading a 16-state lawsuit against Trump’s declaratio­n of a national emergency to get funds for his proposed wall at the southern border.

Since it takes several years to design vehicles, automakers have been planning to meet higher mileage requiremen­ts under Obama-era standards, as well as those in other countries.

For now, “essentiall­y the industry is ignoring what Trump wants to do,” auto industry analyst Sam Abuelsamid of Navigant Research said. “We know at least until this thing gets settled in the courts, we have to deal with California and the other states and have product that can sell there as well as products that can sell overseas.”

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP 2018 ??
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP 2018

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