Automakers call EPA’s most-ambitious-ever vehicle standards ‘aggressive’

Washington — Automakers say they will need government support to meet their obligations under final auto emissions rules detailed Monday by the Environmental Protection Agency, standards that are more stringent than those initially proposed and put in place under former President Barack Obama.

The move reflects months of pressure from environmental and public health groups to implement the strongest rule possible, including eliminating additional incentives and credits that make it easier for automakers to meet standards.

At the same time, electric vehicles today are a rarity on U.S. roads. Gas- and diesel-powered trucks and SUVs are fueling the tens of billions of dollars of investments each major automaker is making over the next few years for EV and battery plants, which are likely to employ fewer people and at lower wages since EVs have fewer components than their counterparts fitted with internal combustion engines.

“EPA’s final rule for greenhouse gas emissions is even more aggressive than originally proposed, requiring a substantial increase in electric vehicle sales, well above the four percent of all light-duty sales today,” John Bozzella, CEO of the Alliance for Automotive Innovation, said in a statement.

Under the final rule, the emissions reduction targets for 2023 to 2026 increase in stringency by between 5% to 10% in each model year to reach a fuel-economy fleetwide average of 40 mpg in 2026 compared to 38 mpg under an August proposal. The increases from the initial proposal come during the latter two years, EPA Administrator Michael Regan said.

The rules represent the most stringent federal greenhouse gas emissions requirements to date and come after years of weakened standards put in place by former President Donald Trump. Those rules put the fleetwide target at 32 mpg.

Michael Regan

“I’m proud to say that we’re delivering on our commitment to the president of the United States,” Regan said ahead of signing the final rule in the presence of electrified vehicles from each of Detroit’s three automakers. “We’re delivering on our commitment to the American people … by setting the most ambitious vehicle-pollution standards for greenhouse gases ever established for passenger cars and light-duty trucks.”

Under the original proposal, emissions reductions would be required to jump 10% in model year 2023 and resume the Obama-era pattern of reducing emissions by 5% annually through model year 2026. 

The agency also planned to bring back a credit “multiplier” that would make every electric vehicle sold count more than once toward compliance and to increase the cap of off-cycle credits automakers could earn for innovative technologies that reduce emissions. It also would extend a program that allows automakers to use banked credits from former years to meet new standards.