The U.S. Senate has decided to discuss a resolution that would roll back California’s stringent vehicle emission standards mandating the phasing out of gas-powered cars.
In December, the EPA granted a waiver to California allowing the state to implement ACC II.
A significant issue with the waiver was that once California institutes ACC II, these standards are “adopted by other states under Section 177 of the Clean Air Act,” the statement said.
“Currently, about a dozen states follow California’s emissions policies, effectively turning the state’s regulations into a nationwide mandate.”
With the Senate now set to consider the resolution, H.J.Res.88 stands a chance to pass the chamber. If President Donald Trump signs it into law, ACC II mandates requiring a transition to zero-emission vehicles would no longer be valid in California.
‘Fewer Choices, Higher Prices’
According to the California Air Resources Board, ACC II regulations would “substantially reduce air pollutants that threaten public health and cause climate change.”“The regulations also take additional steps to clean up internal combustion engines and will provide public health benefits of at least $12 billion over the life of the regulations by reducing premature deaths, hospitalizations, and lost workdays associated with exposure to air pollution,” it said.
The board said its staff met with national, state, and local advocacy organizations before finalizing the rules.
It also developed incentives and rebates for new and used zero-emission cars to make it easier for people to transition to these vehicles. The agency estimates buyers of zero-emission cars stand to gain up to $7,500 in maintenance and operational savings within the first 10 years of ownership.
The electric vehicle mandate in California will lead to automakers across the United States shutting down a “substantial part” of their traditional vehicle production facilities, he said.
This poses “serious consequences” such as diminished economic output, declining tax revenues, and job losses, he added.
“Consumers around the country would face fewer choices, higher prices, and reduced automobile availability,” Thune said. “And our already shaky electric grid would quickly face huge new burdens from the surge in new electric vehicles.”
“And that’s just the start,” he said.
“They’re hijacking the CRA process in a way that’s never been done before.
“Trump gets to choose an agency action or policy he doesn’t like, stamp it with the label ‘CRA,’ send it over to the Congress, and Republicans will bow in obeisance and repeal it with a simple majority vote.”
Thune dismissed such claims in his May 20 remarks, accusing Democrats of trying to derail the repeal of ACC II by “throwing a tantrum over a supposed procedural problem.”
“The California waivers are not rules, Democrats claim, and thus the Congressional Review Act cannot be used to repeal them,” he said.
“Let’s be very clear. The EPA has submitted the waivers to Congress as rules—which is all that Congress has ever needed to decide to consider something under the Congressional Review Act.”