Tag Archives: Emission standard

A big Win! and Thank the EPA


Union of Concerned Scientists

Big Win for Clean Cars

www.ucsusa.org

This is a historic week for U.S. consumers and for the future of our nation’s costly oil use. The Obama administration just finalized fuel economy and global warming emissions standards for cars and light trucks sold in model years 2017-2025, which will roughly double the fuel efficiency of these vehicles.

The standards will save drivers of a new 2025 vehicle nearly $8,000 over its lifetime, compared to driving a typical vehicle on the road today. In addition, the standards will reduce global warming emissions by as much as 270 million metric tons in 2030—the equivalent of shutting down 65 coal-fired power plants for one year.

These standards represent the biggest single step our country can take to reduce oil use, cutting consumption by 1.5 million barrels a day in 2030 and putting us on the path towards halving our projected oil use over the next 20 years.

Much work remains to get to this ambitious goal, and we will no doubt have to protect this hard-fought victory. But today we celebrate, and say thank you.

Thank you for being a part of the UCS community that contacted the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Department of Transportation (DOT), and White House more than 75,000 times to support strong clean car standards throughout the last two years. Thank you for supporting and defending these standards at public hearings, in local newspapers, and in your communities. We would not be celebrating this victory without you.

Now we need your help in delivering one last thank you: Tell the EPA and DOT how much you appreciate the finalization of these standards.

Send a Thank You Today!   www.ucsusa.org

Sincerely,
Rachel Cohen
Rachel Cohen
National Field Organizer
UCS Clean Vehicles Program

Don’t let auto dealers sell us a lemon


Contact Your State’s NADA Director
Urge auto dealers to support new fuel efficiency standards that will clean up our cars, cut America’s oil dependence, reduce global warming emissions, and create new jobs.

This summer, we celebrated a major milestone in the fight to curb global warming and end U.S. dependence on oil when President Obama announced a historic agreement to reduce vehicle emissions and raise fuel efficiency standards to 54.5 miles per gallon by 2025.

These clean car standards will save people money at the gas pump, clean up our air, and create jobs and are supported by environmental, national security, consumer advocacy groups, as well as the United Auto Workers and major automobile manufacturers.

Unfortunately, the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) is trying to stop this plan from taking effect. The Obama administration is currently ironing out the final details of the clean car standards, but NADA members have already descended on Washington, DC, to try to keep consumers and the American economy from reaping the benefits of these new standards.

And this isn’t the first time they’ve been a speed bump on the road to cleaner cars. NADA loudly opposed the clean car standards finalized in April of 2010—but auto dealers across the country are now selling vehicles that comply with these standards, and contrary to NADA’s dire predictions, dealers reported record profits and increased employment last year, with further gains expected in 2011.

Would you buy a tired, used argument from these folks? The auto dealers need to hear from you that their behavior is unacceptable.

Tell your state’s NADA director to create jobs, reduce global warming emissions, and cut America’s oil dependence by supporting the new clean car standards.

Sincerely,
elizabethirvin.JPG
Elizabeth Irvin
Program and Outreach Associate
UCS Clean Vehicles Program

Cleaner Air and a Stronger Economy – A Record of Success


posted by Heather
Zichal on September 02, 2011 at 10:30 AM EDT

White House blog

Over the last two and a half years, the Obama Administration has taken
unprecedented steps forward to protect the public health of American families by
reducing harmful air pollution.  Taken together, the Administration’s clean air
achievements will produce enormous benefits for public health and the
environment – while promoting the nation’s continued economic growth and
well-being.

Clean Air: An Investment in Health, the Environment, and the Economy

Clean air is critical to protecting public health and the environment and the
evidence shows that it’s a good investment.  A recent report by the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) shows that the direct benefits of the Clean
Air Act
– in the form of cleaner air and healthier, more productive
Americans – are estimated to reach nearly $2 trillion in the year 2020,
exceeding the costs by a factor of more than 30 to one.  These benefits are
ultimately about the health of our families.

According to the report, in 2010 alone, the reductions in fine particle and
ozone pollution from the Clean Air Act prevented:

  • 160,000 premature deaths;
  • More than 80,000 emergency room visits;
  • Millions of cases of respiratory problems;
  • Millions of lost workdays, increasing
    productivity;
  • Millions of lost school days due to respiratory
    illness and other diseases caused or exacerbated by air pollution.

The Obama Administration’s Record of Achievement

Doubling fuel efficiency for cars and light duty trucks:
Shortly after taking office, President Obama directed the EPA and the
Department of Transportation (DOT)to set joint fuel efficiency standards and
greenhouse gas standards for cars and light-duty trucks built in 2012-2016.
These groundbreaking standards, finalized in April 2010, will raise fuel
efficiency to 35.5 mpg and begin saving families money at the pump this year.
In July 2011, the President announced the next
round of standards
, for Model Years 2017 – 2025, which will require
performance equivalent to 54.5 mpg or 163 grams/ mile of CO2 for cars and
light-duty trucks by Model Year 2025.  Together, the Administration’s programs
for cars and light duty trucks represent the first meaningful update to fuel
efficiency standards in three decades and will save American families $1.7
trillion dollars in fuel costs, and by 2025 result in an average fuel savings of
over $8,000 per vehicle.  Additionally, these programs will dramatically cut the
oil we consume, saving a total of 12 billion barrels of oil, and by 2025 reduce
oil consumption by 2.2 million barrels a day.  Achieving our efficiency goals
will also secure demand for innovative technologies and manufacturing that will
spur economic growth and create high-quality domestic jobs in cutting edge
industries across America.

First-ever standards for medium and heavy-duty trucks:  In
addition to historic rules for light-duty vehicles, the Administration has
announced the first-ever
fuel economy standards for medium- and heavy-duty trucks
.  Under the
comprehensive new national program, trucks and buses built in 2014 through 2018
will reduce oil consumption by a projected 530 million barrels and greenhouse
gas (GHG) pollution by approximately 270 million metric tons.  The standards are
expected to yield an estimated $50 billion in net benefits over the life of
model year 2014 to 2018 vehicles, resulting in significant long-terms savings
for vehicle owners and operators.

Cutting pollution from power plants and industrial sources:
EPA finalized additional Clean Air Act protections that will slash
hundreds of thousands of tons of smokestack emissions that travel long distances
through the air leading to soot and smog, threatening the health of hundreds of
millions of Americans living downwind. The Cross-State
Air Pollution Rule
 will reduce air pollution (including ozone) and is
projected to prevent up to 34,000 deaths annually, producing annual estimated
net benefits in excess of $100 billion. Twenty seven states in the eastern half
of the country will work with power plants to cut air pollution under the rule,
which leverages widely available, proven and cost-effective control
technologies. Many power plants covered by the rule have already made
substantial investments in clean air technologies to reduce SO2 and
NOx emissions.

First national standard to reduce mercury and other toxic air
pollution from power plants:
Power plants are the largest remaining
source of several toxic air pollutants – responsible for half of mercury and
more than half of acid gas emissions in the United States. In the power sector
alone, coal-fired power plants are responsible for 99 percent of mercury
emissions. In March of 2011, the Administration proposed new power plant mercury
and air toxics standards
to cut harmful emissions of mercury, arsenic,
chromium, nickel and acid gases, preventing as many as 18,000 premature deaths
and 11,000 heart attacks a year. These proposed standards would also prevent up
to 5,300 hospitalizations for respiratory and cardiovascular diseasesand up to
860,000 days of work missed due to illness.  The total health and economic
benefits of this standard in 2016 would be up to $130 billion. In addition, the
Administration is putting in place standards to reduce toxic pollution from
cement plants, oil and gas extraction, and industrial boilers – steps which will
provide large public health benefits for communities across the country.

Reducing harmful air pollution by expanding cleaner alternatives and
increasing efficiency: 
The Recovery Act included over $90 billion for
clean energy – the largest single clean energy investment in American
history. This funding supported programs that created over 224,500 American jobs
and tens of thousands of domestic renewable energy projects through programs
like the successful “1603” renewable energy grant program – which was
successfully extended for a year as part of the December 2010 compromise tax
agreement.  Thanks to these concerted efforts, we are on track to double
renewable energy generation by 2012.

The Administration has also demonstrated a commitment to efficiency, both in
the transportation sector and in the built environment. This includes
implementing more rigorous energy efficiency standards for commercial and
residential appliances, including microwaves, kitchen ranges, dishwashers, light
bulbs and other common appliances, and supporting building retrofits. The
Recovery Through Retrofit program is eliminating key barriers in the home
retrofit industry and the Better Buildings Initiative for commercial buildings
is striving to make this sector 20 percent more efficient by 2020.

Heather Zichal is the Deputy Assistant to the President
for Energy and Climate Change

Tell the EPA: Protect us from Toxic Air … Kathleen Rogers, Earth Day Network


Mercury is so toxic… just 1/70th of a teaspoon can  contaminate a 20 acre lake. Imagine the damage 50 tons can do.

Coal-fired power plants emit over 50 tons of mercury into our air every  single year, more than any other source. Today, mercury exposure is so  widespread in our country that as many as 1 in 6 women of childbearing age have  blood mercury levels high enough to put a baby at risk of mercury poisoning.

There are no restrictions on the amount of toxic mercury  that utility companies can emit. But, at long last, the EPA has proposed a critical  rule to reduce the emission of mercury and other toxic chemicals that power  plants are now able to freely dump into our air.

The Power Plant Mercury and Air Toxics Standard is the most  important clean air rule since 1990 — and the EPA is predictably under  tremendous pressure by the coal industry and other polluters to weaken it. Now,  the EPA has asked us – the public – to weigh in on this critical  rule.

Tell the EPA to uphold this rule and protect Americans from dangerous air pollution. Submit your public comment now.

For decades, the electric industry has successfully fought  requirements to reduce these toxics.

They’ve kept releasing mercury into our air, where it finds  its way into the vast majority of our lakes and waterways, into our fish, and  then into our bodies, where the poison accumulates, causing deadly diseases and  impairing fundamental brain functions like the ability to walk, talk, read,  write and learn.

According to the EPA, reduced emissions from this new air  toxics rule will save as many as 17,000 American lives every year by 2015, and  will prevent up to 120,000 cases of childhood asthma. We must put our support  behind this lifesaving new emissions standard!

Tell  the EPA to uphold this rule and protect Americans from dangerous air pollution.  Submit your public comment now.

Thank  you for taking action during this critical comment period,
Kathleen  Rogers

Does Ford’s clean car press match what they’re saying in DC?


Make Sure the Media Gets it Right on Clean Cars

Make your voice heard and hold the automakers accountable both for their words and their actions as we aim to secure our clean car future.

Tell USA Today that Automaker Sales Show Why We Need Clean Car Standards >> http://action.ucsusa.org/site/R?i=cBRjbrJcoXRmIxbo0qEWCQ .. 

The time to secure our clean car future is now. The federal government and California are collaborating on new emissions and fuel economy standards (aka “clean car standards”) which will cover vehicles from model years 2017-2025. These standards will help break America’s dangerous addiction to oil and are a significant piece of the Union of Concerned Scientists’ plan to cut our nation’s projected oil use in half by 2030.

U.S. automakers, such as Ford, are already benefiting from the current round of clean car standards. Indeed, USA Today notes that Ford’s main sales winner is the remodeled Explorer SUV model, which focused on fuel efficiency improvements. In acknowledging the U.S. consumer, Ford said “With oil nearing $100 per barrel and gasoline prices continuing to rise, consumers’ consideration for fuel economy once again is taking top billing.”

But as Ford sings the clean car song to the press, they and the other U.S. automakers are actually pushing to weaken the 2025 standards. Ensuring full and accurate coverage of the automakers in the press will be critical to pushing back against this effort.

We’ve proven time and time again that the public voice is an essential counterbalance to the automaker spin machine. So head to our online Action Center and help make sure the press is covering this story with your interests in mind, not just the automakers’.

Take Action Today!      http://action.ucsusa.org/site/R?i=cBRjbrJcoXRmIxbo0qEWCQ..

Take care,

Scott Nathanson

National Field Organizer

UCS Clean Vehicles Program

P.S. Are you a FB user and want to use the power of “The Social Network” to clean up our cars? Then “like” our new UCS Clean Car Watchdog Facebook page. It will give you the latest news and even more real-time opportunities to make your voice heard on this crucial issue.