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Government Math United States

EPA Reasoning For Gutting Fuel-Economy Rule Doesn't Hold Up, Senator Finds (arstechnica.com) 93

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: The Trump administration has for several years been working to weaken federal vehicle fuel-efficiency standards. To justify these changes, regulatory agencies argued that more stringent standards would both cost consumers more and reduce road safety. A draft version of the new final rule, however, seems to directly contradict those lines of reasoning. The draft of the Safer Affordable Fuel-Efficient (SAFE) Vehicles rule has not been released publicly, but Sen. Thomas Carper (D-Del.) has seen it. In a letter (PDF) to the White House, Carper says not only is the rule "replete with numerous questionable legal, procedural, and technical assertions," as well as "apparent typographical and other errors," but it also completely fails to provide the safety or economic benefits initially claimed.

"Remarkably, the costs of the Trump administration's draft final rule exceed its benefits to Americans" relative to the current standards. The senator writes: "While the draft final rule finds that the per vehicle purchase price would be reduced relative to the Obama rules by $977 (EPA greenhouse gas standards)/$1,083 (DOT's fuel economy standards), the draft final rule also projects that the increased gasoline consumers would have to use to operate the less fuel-efficient vehicles would ad $1,461 (EPA greenhouse gas standards)/$1,423 (DOT fuel economy standards) to these costs. Adding hundreds of dollars to the cost of each vehicle would seem to be the opposite of the more "affordable" vehicles the SAFE rule promised." Further, Carper notes, the estimate of lives potentially saved over a nearly 50-year time period by upgrading to new cars does not take into account the lives potentially lost to illness and disease attributable to increased pollution from less efficient cars. And of course, Carper notes, lower fuel-economy standards that result in consumers buying and using more gas, means burning more fossil fuels at a time when we should be doing the opposite.
"My office's review of the draft final rule indicates that it utterly fails to provide any demonstrable safety, environmental, or economic benefit to consumers or the country," Carper concludes. "It should be abandoned. At a minimum, I seek your commitment that you will not allow the finalization of this extreme and unlawful environmental rollback in any form that even remotely resembles" the current draft.
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EPA Reasoning For Gutting Fuel-Economy Rule Doesn't Hold Up, Senator Finds

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  • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @06:48PM (#59653474) Journal

    Well I'm shocked. A Democrat disagrees with a draft from the Trump adminstration. That's major news.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Are you a moron? This isn't a democrat disagreeing. This is a Democrat reading the Trump administrations draft, where it says right in the draft the opposite of what the administration claimed they would do (assuming of course that the draft actually literally says what he claims it says...it hasn't been released yet so no way to know).
    • That's as deep as you can go? You are an idiot, what fools modded you 5?

  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @06:49PM (#59653478)
    Rule #1: Don't bother the White House with facts as long as Donald Trump is there.
    • Re: (Score:1, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday January 24, 2020 @07:46PM (#59653646)

      I'm actually hoping this gets through and US car companies start adhering to it.

      The entire rest of the world doesn't want shitty less efficient vehicles. US vehicles are uninteresting and basic inside, take away any competitiveness on efficiency and it's the final nail in the coffin for the US car industry.

      Trump is literally handing the global car industry to Europe and Japan with this move so it's fantastic for those of us living outside the US; it means our economies grow at the expense of the US due to it choosing to become wholly uncompetitive.

      It's similar to the fact Trump doesn't believe in global warming and has cut all investment in green tech, it means the US has dropped out of the race to own the next big industry that's up for grabs and left more for the rest of us. There's only one direction the world is travelling in, but the US is still trying to travel against it which is kind of great for anyone that doesn't live in the US because their loss is our gain.

      • US vehicles are uninteresting and basic inside

        Holy crap, I'll say. Greetings from Texas. I'm a European visiting your country for the first time. Things to note: You people are incredibly nice. Hickory smoked anything is like an angel pissing in my mouth (if you understand that phrase you'll know which European country I came from, it's a complement by the way), and your cars. .... well your cars feel like I've stepped back in time. Hiring a premium car from Hertz only to find it doesn't come with GPS as standard, is a fuel inefficient tank, and genera

        • by mishehu ( 712452 )
          The Model 3 has ruined driving anything from any other manufacturer in its class for me. All the rest do feel like taking a Delorean to 88 mph. Granted there are some things that I'm not fully comfortable with (such as the always-reporting-location, but that is a double-edged sword: it is useful feature for me, but it could also be a useful feature for somebody with nefarious intent), but overall I have no desire really to drive anything else. I had a Toyota 86 until recently, and though it was a fun ca
        • Might be more a problem with Hertz than anything else. Plenty of modern American cars have GPS units in them, if you pay enough. They've mostly thrown in the towel on fuel efficient cars for the US market since consumers haven't been keen on them now that gasoline prices are so low (and not really going anywhere).

      • But the US market is still rewarding automakers richly for selling large, inefficient vehicles. Foreign automakers have sorted that out and are saturating our markets with trucks and SUVs. Do you really think they'll stop just because "the entire rest of the world doesn't want shitty less efficient vehicles"?

        Automakers will need to appeal to both markets - those heavily regulated by fuel standards, and those not so much.

  • His letter says he is criticizing a copy of a document he received from a non-government source, including typos and sections that don't exist.

    He probably reviews movies he hasn't seen and products he hasn't bought too

  • The whole reason to mandate better fuel economy is that it can reduce the amount of C02 emitted per unit of usage. This then decreases the sales of fuel by the petroleum industry. Therefore any legislation that reduces the need for automotive fuel is strongly resisted by the industry.

    The industry could care less who is in power as long as nothing gets in the way of "drill baby drill", shoving oil and gas pipelines up the asses of all who reside on land where it is deemed feasible, selling with the highest

    • by cowdung ( 702933 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @07:42PM (#59653630)

      CO2 is not the only reason. Other reasons include:
      - pollution created to produce fuel
      - the acceleration of fuel reserve depletion
      - the emission of car smoke and the associated problems of acid rain, smog, etc.
      - the continued dependency of the US on Arab states
      - the concentration of geopolitical power around oil producing countries

      There are many reasons to reduce our consumption of petroleum. If you don't believe in Climate Change there are plenty of other reasons.

      This cartoon illustrates it best:
      https://www.kentucky.com/opini... [kentucky.com]

  • by RazorSharp ( 1418697 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @08:20PM (#59653724)

    Like many of the current political controversies, this one is dumb. While Trump's new EPA rules may, in theory allow cars to pollute more, vehicle manufacturers already planned to make them more efficient during the Obama years and they're not going to steer away from that course because Trump says it's okay. Car manufacturers—when doing their jobs correctly—look at things in the long term. The big three already got burned by putting all their chips in on gas-guzzlers during the first decade of the 2000s. Consumer demand, the necessity of competing with foreign competition that is driven by foreign regulations, and the fear that a future administration will place even more stringent MPG regulations in place all ensure that the big three won't reverse their course now.

    I recall when Trump first announced this rule change the big three balked at it. He implemented it anyway because he knew it would piss off his political opponents and he doesn't really understand how manufacturing works.

    • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @08:46PM (#59653792) Journal

      vehicle manufacturers already planned to make them more efficient during the Obama years and they're not going to steer away from that course because Trump says it's okay.

      Some of them certainly are. Else how to explain why they have aligned themselves with the reduced MPG requirements?
      https://www.caranddriver.com/n... [caranddriver.com]

    • "Trump's new EPA rules may, in theory allow cars to pollute more, vehicle manufacturers already planned to make them more efficient during the Obama years and they're not going to steer away from that course because Trump says it's okay."

      Of course they are. All cars are expected to have performance now in spite of speed limits that haven't changed in decades, and you can get more performance if you sacrifice mileage when tuning. It's a software change. They also not only sell the same vehicles with differen

  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Friday January 24, 2020 @08:34PM (#59653766) Journal
    Trump and his so-called 'Republican' (so-called because Republican legislators from 50 years ago, I'm pretty sure, would be utterly appalled at how they act now) party, as well as his 'administration', don't give a flying fuck about the average citizen, whether they and their families are healthy and safe from harm, all they care about is corporate health, welfare (in the very literal sense of the word) and Big Business making as much profit as possible, regardless of the consequences to the environment or to citizens. So, basically: fuck the Earth, fuck The People, fuck everything that doesn't make corporations lots and lots of money, and most of all, fuck the future.

    To you jackasses who voted for this son-of-a-bitch: let's see how happy you are about this when your kids are developing lung disease from polluted air, and cancer from pollution in the water supply.
    • Remember that at the previous election it was like selecting between two rotten fruits and at least most considered if going rotten, then all in.

      As for driving fuel efficiency - just tax the fuel prices. A lot less complicated since it would make people think about what car they actually need. And it would be filling some holes in the economy.

      • Buddy, at this point, knowing what I know and seeing what I've seen, I'd've goddamned well voted for Hillary instead that Jill Stein person. Hillary couldn't have been anywhere near as bad as Trump. It would've been worth it just to see Putin seethe at having to deal with a United States led by someone he hates, who isn't afraid to get in his face on the world stage and call him out on his bullshit, and I'm polarized enough now like most people that the so-called 'conservatives' would have been seething imp
    • It's not 'Flamebait' if it's true. Trump supporters need psychiatric help.
  • Basically the study says, sure, fuel efficient cars will kill more people, but its all okay because it will prevent some "carbon pollution", and all of the paranoid end of the world scenarios of the doomsday cult.

    Another factor we perhaps should look into is the repairability of cars. This is ever so important for low income people who cannot afford a mechanic and need to do as many of their own repairs as possible. Fuel efficient encourages desperate efforts that lead to cramped cars of now are increasingl

    • Another factor we perhaps should look into is the repairability of cars. This is ever so important for low income people who cannot afford a mechanic and need to do as many of their own repairs as possible. Fuel efficient encourages desperate efforts that lead to cramped cars of now are increasingly difficult to repair due to inaccessible components and increased technical complexity.

      No thanks. 60 years of promoting fuel inefficient POS will not be helped by promoting the continued operation of those clunkers on our roads. We should be encouraging the scrapping of older cars, not some misguided attempt to maintain clunkers.

      • I hear you, but there's no reason why both can't be done.

        There's no good reason you should have to jack up an engine or remove a bunch of engine components to change spark plugs on a car. There's no good reason why you should have to remove the entire fucking front end to change a headlight or an alternator. Just making the engine compartment slightly roomier (and we're not talking much, maybe 6 inches of extra space, total, front/back and/or side/side) would make a HUGE difference in the serviceability o

  • If you allow California emission standards, the next thing you know, the Central Park 5 rapists will put bananas in your tailpipes.
    Stop them now, folks, before it's too late.
  • Remove all oil subsidies and then let the true free market decide what type of vehicles should be on the road.
  • This is an inconsequential internet forum. We can at least drop the euphemisms and spin here and at least be honest with each other because none of us nor our opinions matter AT ALL.

    The title of this story could well be "Senator who already deeply hates Trump finds another reason to criticize him and his policies." (which would certainly get less clicks, yes?)

    This of course logically says nothing about whether the policies are intrinsically worthwhile or worth criticizing.

    But to amplify the voice of this s

    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      Like a lot of smart people, Mr Obama seemed to be wedded to the deficit model of communication: you disagree with me because you don't have all the facts I have. If you just knew all the facts, or experienced how wonderful the world would be with this new policy, you would come to agree with me. If only they could get these rules changed in place, people who disagreed with them would see how nice everything is now.

      Yup. He was 100% right about Obamacare in this sense. Nobody is interested in repealing O
      • Indeed, there are parts of Obamacare that people like.
        But there are parts of Obamacare that are already gone, and other parts half the country is trying to get rid of.

        • There are also parts of Romneycare (Obamacare is essentially identical to the Republican health care plan promoted by ol' Mitt previously) which are crap. Specifically, that the insurance companies are involved. What we wanted was single payer. Hillary Clinton even championed it back in the early days of Bubba. They laughed her out of the room and didn't let her talk again until she took a big fat wad of campaign contributions from big pharma, at which point she declared that single payer health care was de

          • - Insurance costs were already skyrocketing,. They only accelerated FASTER after Obamacare. I run a small business - we were seeing annual premium increases of 15-30% before Obamacare; with it, we simply LOST the magnificent, best-possible program we provided to our employees (as well as 50% coverage to sig other and immed family) because BCBS cancelled access to it when Obamacare was invented AND in any case we'd have had to pay a further tax on our 'luxury plan' anyway. So now our costs are increasing

    • Of course, this is theoretically objective, and fantastically wrong while being incredibly patronizing. It first presumes we disagree ONLY because you don't know as much as I do; you're ignorant or uninformed. Second, it's not how people work. Even in highly informed scientific circles where the issues are reasonably objective (I don't think there's a political spin to Hawkings Black Hole Information theories...yet?) and you have two scientists reasonably equally experts in the field, there are disagreements about the theory.

      True ... but it's also the case that -- at least in my experience -- most day-to-day disagreements boil down to either a lack of knowledge of one party or another (or both!,) or not verifying that the words they're using are being interpreted with the same meaning by both parties. Many of the rest are due to not understanding probability, or having differing acceptance of levels of risk.

"When the going gets tough, the tough get empirical." -- Jon Carroll

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