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Obama calling for a 42 MPG fleet average by 2016


It’s been a long time since there has been any movement at all in the corporate average fleet efficiencies (CAFE) for cars and trucks in America. I’ve stood by and campaigned for higher targets for years, and car companies (yes, even Toyota) kept saying it couldn’t be done (meanwhile, it was being done without trouble in other countries.)

But now someone (President Obama) is finally taking a stand and will be catching America up to the rest of the world by 2016. The current fleet fuel economy laws require companies to have an average of all their cars at a powerfully inefficient 27.5 MPG. Obama’s regulations will bump that up to 42 MPG, something only three cars in America currently beat.

This also comes with an unfortunate compromise. Light trucks (read SUVs) will only be required to bump from 24 mpg to 27 mpg by the 2016 deadline. The result could very well be a significant increase in light truck sales, as automakers avoid the technological obstacles to increasing the efficiency of larger cars by making more SUVs.

The auto industry looks as if it is actually 100% behind this new fuel-saving, greenhouse gas-reducing plan. The President of the Alliance of Auto Manufacturers had this to say:

For seven long years, there has been a debate over whether states or the federal government should regulate autos. President Obama’s announcement ends that old debate by starting a federal rulemaking to set a National Program. What’s significant about the announcement is it launches a new beginning, an era of cooperation. The President has succeeded in bringing three regulatory bodies, 15 states, a dozen automakers and many environmental groups to the table. We’re all agreeing to work together on a National Program.

The final obstacle to this legislation is that, by 2016, all major car companies will be selling electric vehicles. How CAFE legislation will treat electric and range-extended electric vehicles could have several effects. If the government creates huge loopholes for companies that create a few hundred EVs, it could significantly weaken the legislation. But if we play our cards right, this could help usher in the age of electric vehicles.

It finally looks as if we might have effective fuel efficiency legislation in this country for the first time in 30 years.

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