Colorado Governor John Hickenlooper announced Tuesday that his state would join 13 states and the District of Columbia in adopting Californiaโs clean car emissions standards.
โColorado has a choice,โ Gov. Hickenlooper said in a statement. โThis executive order calls for the state to adopt air quality standards that will protect our quality of life in Colorado. Low emissions vehicles are increasingly popular with consumers and are better for our air. Every move we make to safeguard our environment is a move in the right direction.โ
Under the Clean Air Act, states have the right to adopt Californiaโs emissions standards for motor vehicles.
Currently, Californiaโs standards for greenhouse gas emissions are harmonized with national standards, under โThe National Programโ that was negotiated by the Obama administration, automakers, and the state of California back in 2011.
However, the Trump administration is threatening to roll back the national standards, freezing limits on greenhouse gas emissions at model year 2022 levels for cars sold in 2022-2025.
Californiaโs state air regulators have said that they have no intention of weakening their state standards, even if the federal government goes forward with its plan to abandon the harmonized plan.
โCalifornia will not weaken its nationally accepted clean car standards, and automakers will continue to meet those higher standards, bringing better gas mileage and less pollution for everyone,โ Mary Nichols, chair of the California Air Resources Board, wrote in a statement emailed to reporters when Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt announced that his agency would revisit the Obama-era rules.
Statesโ Right to Regulate Auto Emissions Through Californiaโs Waiver
States have the right, under Section 177 of the Clean Air Act, to adopt Californiaโs standards. Even before Coloradoโs announcement, the thirteen states and District of Columbia that have signed onto Californiaโs standards represent a full one-third of the American auto market.
However, Californiaโs right to set these standards depends on a waiver, mandated by the Clean Air Act, to be granted by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) if the state has โcompelling and extraordinary circumstances.โ California successfully argued for such circumstances a decade ago, and the Obama EPA approved the waiver.
In the history of the Clean Air Act, such a waiver has never been revoked.
A number of conservative groups, many with ties to the petrochemical billionaire Koch brothers and other oil interests, have been lobbying Pruitt and the EPA to try to strip Californiaโs right to self-regulate. And a leaked plan from the EPA signaled the agencyโs intention to try to revoke the waiver.
Despite his oft-repeated support of โcooperative federalism,โ Pruitt has argued that โCalifornia is not the arbiterโ of emissions standards for the country.
Air regulators and attorneys general in California and other of the so-called โ177 statesโ have countered that the Clean Air Act is unambiguous in granting Golden State authorities the right to set standards for the state โ not the nation โ and in granting other states the right to choose between Californiaโs or national standards.
Whether Pruitt will be around to make the call on the waiver is uncertain. The administratorโs mounting scandals have become so toxic that even the prominent trade magazine Automotive News has recently called for Pruittโs ousting:
Political views aside, a serious industry deserves a serious regulator, a public servant of proven integrity who lives by at least a baseline standard of propriety.
Scott Pruitt is none of those things. He may be a handy political ally, but his conduct in office at the EPA, marked by an unending string of tawdry scandals, is anathema to everything the auto industry would expect of its own employees.
He should resign before he embarrasses the auto industry, and the nation, further.
Auto Alliance Attacks Colorado
Now that Colorado has exercised its right as a state to adopt Californiaโs air quality standards for vehicles, it is being attacked by the same car companies who are simultaneously lobbying for one national standard.
โColoradoโs governor today signed an Executive Order committing the state to adopting Californiaโs low emission vehicle standard. This could impose many burdens on the stateโs drivers & taxpayers,โ the Auto Alliance tweeted on Tuesday.
Coloradoโs governor today signed an Executive Order committing the state to adopting Californiaโs low emission vehicle standard.
This could impose many burdens on the stateโs drivers & taxpayers.
Share this link with your friends in Colorado: https://t.co/frsnX9brqN pic.twitter.com/IiABokMBeq
โ Auto Alliance (@auto_alliance) June 19, 2018
Along with Coloradoโs Chamber of Commerce, the Auto Alliance also launched a website, TheColoradoWay.org, that features a number of claims about how Californiaโs standards would hurt Coloradoโs economy and reduce consumer choice.
This is despite the fact that Californiaโs standards are currently harmonized with the national program, and Coloradoโs order doesnโt include any mandates for sales of any particular class of vehicle.
The Auto Alliance, through this website, also claims paradoxically that stronger fuel efficiency standards would cause gas prices to go up in Colorado.
According to a recent analysis by the Union of Concerned Scientists (USC), however, the economic impacts of the current fuel economy and emissions standards are overwhelmingly positive. The standards that Gov. Hickenlooper hopes to maintain with this executive order have saved Coloradans $550 million to date, and are projected to save another $2,700 per household through 2030, according to the USC analysis.
Main image: Colorado 1966 โ Truck Credit: Jerry โWoody,โ CC BYโSA 2.0
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