No Result
View All Result
Online EV Marketplace
No Result
View All Result

EPA may allow weaker emissions rules, slower EV rollout

Dr.Ev by Dr.Ev
02/21/2024
in Electric Cars
281 3
0
136
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on Twitter


The Biden administration may throttle back strict emissions rules in order to give automakers more time to ramp up EV sales, the New York Times reported earlier this week.

You might also like

Tesla Model3 Electric Cars Spied On Truck In India But Don’t Get Excited: Here’s Why [Video] – CarToq.com

California dealers seek to block VW Scout EV brand, which cut them out

Five facts about electric vehicles in 2024 – PinalCentral

Last April, the EPA unveiled proposed tailpipe emissions rules for model years 2027 to 2032. The agency estimated at the time that this would lead to 67% EV sales by 2032, not because EV sales would be mandated, but because automakers would need to sell more EVs to meet emissions targets.

Increased EV sales and lower emissions are still the plan, but the Biden administration is considering tweaks that would “slow the pace at which auto manufacturers would need to comply,” according to the report, citing multiple sources. The goal is reportedly to ramp up EV sales more gradually through the end of the decade, with a sharper increase from 2030 onward.

Site of planned Toyota Battery Manufacturing North Carolina (TBMNC) battery plant

Site of planned Toyota Battery Manufacturing North Carolina (TBMNC) battery plant

The possible change is in response to automakers’ wish to slow EV rollouts in order to allow more time to expand charging infrastructures, and labor unions’ desire to have more time to unionize new EV-related factories, particularly in the South, according to the report.

The administration plans to finalize the rules by this spring. It will also have to finalize corresponding Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) aimed for 43.5 mpg across the new-vehicle fleet by 2032.

2022 GMC Hummer EV pre-production at Factory Zero plant in Detroit, Michigan

2022 GMC Hummer EV pre-production at Factory Zero plant in Detroit, Michigan

One of the most controversial points is that CAFE rules would sharply reduce the “petroleum equivalency factor”—reworking the way regulators compare gasoline vehicles and EVs around the bulk of scientific information on the impact of EVs vs. ICE models. Based on the revised methodology, automakers would need to produce more than 35 EVs to get the same fleet boost, enabling gas-guzzling trucks, that they get for every 10 EVs now.

Automakers backed the tighter new rules in process, although now they face a lot of opposition—including growing opposition from a faction of U.S. dealers. A significant minority of U.S. dealerships last month sent a letter to the Biden administration, calling the EV shift “unrealistic.”



Source link

Tags: emissionsEPARolloutrulesSlowerweaker
Previous Post

Goldman Sachs Insists Our Future Transportation Is All Electric – CleanTechnica

Next Post

Powering the Future: The Rise of Wireless EV Charging in the U.S. – BNN Breaking

Dr.Ev

Dr.Ev

Related Posts

Tesla Model3 Electric Cars Spied On Truck In India But Don’t Get Excited: Here’s Why [Video] – CarToq.com

by Dr.Ev
12/27/2024
0

Tesla Model3 Electric Cars Spied On Truck In India But Don’t Get Excited: Here’s Why   CarToq.com Source link

California dealers seek to block VW Scout EV brand, which cut them out

by Dr.Ev
12/26/2024
0

VW bypassed conventional dealerships for selling upcoming Scout electric trucks Dealer interests in California say this is in violation of...

Five facts about electric vehicles in 2024 – PinalCentral

by Dr.Ev
12/26/2024
0

Five facts about electric vehicles in 2024  PinalCentral Source link

2025 Nissan Ariya lineup drops longest-range model

by Dr.Ev
12/26/2024
0

The 2025 Nissan Ariya costs $40,980 The longest-range model will go up to 289 miles on a charge The Ariya...

Next Post

Powering the Future: The Rise of Wireless EV Charging in the U.S. - BNN Breaking

Online EV Marketplace

© 2025 Online EV

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • News
  • Buying Advice
  • Videos
  • Contact

Follow Us

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Buying Advice
  • Videos
  • Contact

© 2025 Online EV