President Joe Biden signed an executive order on Thursday setting a target that half of all new vehicle sales by 2030 will be zero-emissions vehicles, primarily electric cars and trucks.
It’s the latest ambitious climate target from Biden, who has
pledged to put the country on a path to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by
at least half the 2005 level by 2030. And it’s backed up by new proposed rules
to strengthen upcoming federal tailpipe requirements through 2026, with even
stricter regulations expected for the following years.
The executive order, to be inked on Thursday, calls for 50
percent of US vehicles sales to be “battery-electric, plug-in hybrid electric,
or fuel cell electric vehicles” in fewer than 10 years.
It is the latest move by the Biden administration to undo
former President Donald Trump’s dramatic loosening of many environmental
regulations and climate protections.
The new target was also announced along with a voluntary
commitment from the top three US auto manufacturers – Ford, General Motors and
Stellantis – to achieve sales of “40-50” percent of zero-emissions vehicles by
2030
The executive order signed by Biden will also call on the
relevant federal authorities to beef up fuel consumption and emission
regulations, which had been rolled back under Trump, the White House said in a
statement.
The actions will “strengthen American leadership in clean
cars and trucks by accelerating innovation and manufacturing in the auto
sector, bolstering the auto sector domestic supply chain, and growing auto jobs
with good pay and benefits”, it added.
United Auto Workers (UAW), the country’s largest auto union,
has already rallied behind the measures.
“The members of the UAW, current and future, are ready to
build these electric cars and trucks and the batteries that go in them,” union
President Ray Curry said in a statement released through the White House.
“Our members are America’s secret weapon in winning this
global race.”
Transportation remains the single biggest contributor in the
US to climate change, according to officials.
While about 10 percent of European car sales are of electric
vehicles, they account for less than 2 percent of car sales in the US,
according to the International Energy Agency in 2020
Vehicles in the US spewed 824 million tonnes of
heat-trapping carbon dioxide in 2019, about 14 percent of total US emissions,
according to the country’s Environmental Protection Agency.
In its announcement on Wednesday, the Biden administration
did not immediately unveil its new emissions regulations, but said it would
build on a pre-existing agreement between the state of California and five
automakers – Ford, Honda, Volkswagen Group, BMW, and Volvo – reached after a
state law setting strict car pollution rules was blocked by the Trump
administration.
The current US emissions regulations, set by the Trump
administration in March 2020, require manufacturers to improve by 1.5 percent
the energy efficiency of their vehicles between 2021 and 2026.
That is far below the target set by Trump’s predecessor, Barack
Obama, of a 5-percent energy efficiency increase during that period.
Biden, Obama’s vice president who took office as president in January, had separately pledged during a global climate summit in April to cut US fossil fuel emissions up to 52 percent in less than 10 years, in the most ambitious climate effort ever taken by a US administration.
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