• Re: Biden wants to coax Americans into electric cars. These 3 groups ha

    From Angle@21:1/5 to Michael Ejercito on Mon Apr 24 16:01:19 2023
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    On Monday, April 17, 2023 at 2:38:46 PM UTC+2, Michael Ejercito wrote:
    https://www.politico.com/news/2023/04/13/fight-over-biden-electric-car-push-00091800


    Biden wants to coax Americans into electric cars. These 3 groups have
    other ideas.
    The automakers themselves expressed wary resignation about Wednesday’s proposed pollution standards.

    Senator John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) is pictured.
    “First President Biden came for our gas stoves,” Sen. John Barrasso said Wednesday morning. “Now he wants to ban the cars we drive.” | Graeme Jennings/AP Photo

    By TANYA SNYDER, BEN LEFEBVRE and KELSEY TAMBORRINO

    04/13/2023 11:00 AM EDT

    President Joe Biden’s attempt to force automobile companies to
    supercharge the supply of electric vehicles could spur a huge fight with
    the oil and gas industry — and provoke a partisan feeding frenzy from Republicans looking for their next gas-stoves-style culture war.

    The automakers themselves — the industry most directly affected — expressed wary resignation about Wednesday’s proposed pollution
    standards, despite cautioning that the swift transition Biden is
    envisioning may not be practical.


    But elements of the oil industry, which has a lot to lose if
    gasoline-fueled cars fade from the nation’s highways, are already suing
    to block a previous Biden-era auto pollution rule. The ethanol industry, whose product is blended into gasoline, joined that lawsuit. So did
    several Republican-led states, who argued that the Environmental
    Protection Agency lacks the authority to order such a sweeping change in
    how Americans get around.

    People in the oil industry were surprised at how ambitious EPA’s newest rule is, multiple oil industry lobbyists said, complaining that Biden’s regulators had skipped the Obama administration’s practice of meeting
    with outside groups while prepping a rule.

    “The administration on these things, they tend to go big,” said Bruce Thompson, CEO of oil and grid consulting and lobbying firm CapeDC
    Advisors, adding that he saw the proposal mostly as a messaging exercise meant to energize Biden’s green supporters. “It’s almost as if they’re
    trying to convince people they’re actually doing something. It’s way over the top… I suspect a lot of this is theater.”

    Biden’s supporters said they’re sure the new rules will hold up in court, noting that Congress enacted a climate law last year that’s
    pouring billions of dollars into the effort to get more electric cars on
    the road. And administration officials expressed confidence that the
    auto industry can meet the EPA’s audacious goal of having electric vehicles account for two-thirds of new sales by 2032 — despite the carmakers’ public misgivings.

    EPA chief says new EV rule will spur innovation, save money

    SharePlay Video
    “When I look at the projections that many in the automobile industry
    have made, this is the future,” EPA Administrator Michael Regan said Wednesday morning during the proposal’s official unveiling. “The consumer demand is there. The markets are enabling it. The technologies
    are enabling it.”

    But whether the rule can succeed depends on multiple complicated issues, including the average electric vehicle’s hefty price tag, the patchy
    state of the nation’s charging infrastructure, and the Treasury Department’s recent tightening of a $7,500 tax incentive that was
    supposed to make EVs more affordable. Other challenges include China’s dominance of the supply chain for batteries and the need to upgrade the
    U.S. power grid.

    Here are the opponents who could make the task even tougher:

    Republicans and red state attorneys general push back
    Republicans in Congress are already stoking the fires of what could be
    the next big culture war: A fight over what’s in Americans’ driveways. And they’re invoking the partisan flare-up from earlier this year over another fossil-fuel touchstone of Americana — a false accusation that Biden was proposing to ban gas stoves.

    “First President Biden came for our gas stoves,” Sen. John Barrasso (R-Wyo.), the top Republican on the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee, said Wednesday morning. “Now he wants to ban the cars we drive.”

    Biden does, in fact, want to get millions of Americans to give up their gasoline-powered cars. And there’s not much that Republicans in Congress can do about it immediately, aside from attempting to pass a resolution
    that would roll back the EPA rule. (Biden could veto such a resolution.)

    But a coalition of 17 attorneys general from GOP-led states has already
    sued over an earlier EPA auto-emissions rule, along with plaintiffs from
    the oil and gas industry. Though none of those states have yet
    explicitly threatened to sue over this latest version, West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey hinted Wednesday that another
    multistate legal challenge could be on the way. “We’ll be ready to once again lead the charge against wrongheaded energy proposals like these,” Morrisey said in a statement.

    He also said the new rule showed that “this administration is hell bent
    on destroying America’s energy security and independence” and making the U.S. dependent on resources from “countries like China and the
    Democratic Republic of Congo.”

    Oil, gas and ethanol sharpen their knives
    The oil and gas industry for the most part seems to be happy to let
    other industries poke holes in the rule, or for it to collapse under its
    own weight, lobbyists told POLITICO — or both.

    But the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers, the main trade association representing refining companies, will be pushing the administration to make changes. And EPA is on shaky legal ground if it doesn’t, said Patrick Kelly, the group’s senior director for fuel and vehicle policy.

    “I don’t think Congress has given the EPA authority to do this,” Kelly said in an interview just after an initial reading of the rule. “We need to look at where the EPA may have drifted into the Department of Transportation’s lane for setting fuel economy standards and where the
    EPA may have exceeded the authority Congress gave it.”

    Ethanol interests also expressed frustration with the proposed rules and objected to the administration’s characterization of electric vehicles
    as being free of greenhouse gas pollution. They said the agency isn’t accounting for the energy-intensive nature of mineral mining and battery building, as well as the energy used to charge electric vehicles.

    Geoff Cooper, president and CEO of the Renewable Fuels Association,
    noted that a majority of U.S. electricity today comes from fossil fuels.
    He said his group will be reaching out to members of Congress on what it calls a better approach — rather than what he called “carbon accounting gimmicks to create a de facto EV mandate.”

    Monte Shaw, executive director of the Iowa Renewable Fuels Association,
    an associate member of the national trade group, also accused the administration of putting its “thumb on the scale for EVs.”

    And as an executive branch action, Wednesday’s rule proposal is
    vulnerable to being reversed by a future administration, much as former President Donald Trump’s regulators tried to undo EPA’s Obama-era regulations. Shaw predicted a continuation of “disjointed public policy” on emissions, characterized by “radical U turns” in policy until a consensus is reached.

    But Thompson, from CapeDC Advisors, said he thinks the oil industry will “stay out of the crosshairs on this one” and let the auto industry lead the charge against the rule in the courts — assuming the carmakers do so.

    The EPA rule is “more of an eyeroll than a source of consternation,” said one lobbyist, who was granted anonymity because they were not authorized to speak to the press.

    But another industry lobbyist, also speaking on condition of anonymity,
    said the oil industry couldn’t just “leave it up to the autos because they have very different goals: The autos take issue with the speed with which they’re accelerating the energy transition, not the transition itself.”

    Automobiles warn of a proposal that could be doomed to fail
    Automakers are pouring more than $100 billion into the transition to electric, but they say the new EPA proposal goes too far too fast, especially considering the many challenges involving charging, minerals
    and the tax-credit restrictions.

    One noteworthy feature of Wednesday’s rule rollout was what the
    automakers didn’t say. Officials from GM, Ford, Mercedes and the
    Alliance for Automotive Innovation, the principal U.S. trade group for
    the auto industry, were present for Wednesday’s unveiling at EPA headquarters in Washington but didn’t speak.

    The event had originally been expected to happen in Detroit, the industry’s home turf, a person familiar with the situation said. But the person, granted anonymity to discuss sensitive negotiations, said
    automakers were concerned that holding it there could make it appear
    they were endorsing a proposal they hadn’t seen yet.

    But people in the industry made it clear they don’t love the proposal.

    Alliance for Automotive Innovation leader John Bozzella noted in a
    statement Wednesday that the EPA’s goal for electric vehicle adoption
    goes beyond Biden’s original target of having EVs make up 50 percent of new vehicle sales by 2030. He questioned how the agency could justify steamrolling that “carefully considered and data-driven goal,” especially since the industry and the administration had agreed on it
    just two years ago..

    “To be clear, 50 percent was always a stretch goal and predicated on several conditions,” Bozzella said. Those conditions included the
    climate law’s incentives for manufacturers, which “have only just begun to be implemented,” and the $7,500 tax credits that the Treasury Department is now dramatically curtailing to meet Congress’ domestic sourcing requirements.

    Nobody in the auto industry was threatening to go to court, but Bozzella also wasn’t endorsing the administration’s more ambitious new goal.

    “The question isn’t can this be done, it’s how fast can it be done, and
    how fast will depend almost exclusively on having the right policies and market conditions in place,” he said.

    Individual statements from some major carmakers were more noncommittal.
    Ford touted its advancement of electric vehicles and promised “strong coordinated action from the public and private sectors.” A GM
    spokesperson told POLITICO that policy staff is still going through the massive rule but that the company would likely submit comments on the rule.

    Manufacturers exclusively invested in EVs, such as Rivian, applauded the
    EPA proposal.

    The Zero Emission Transportation Association urged the administration to
    act swiftly to encourage more Americans to buy electric vehicles — and
    to ensure the industry is capable of providing them.

    James Bikales and Alex Guillén contributed to this report.

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