
US expected to declare Biden fuel economy rules exceeded legal authority
The US Transportation Department is expected to declare that fuel economy rules issued under then President Joe Biden exceeded the government's legal authority by including electric vehicles in setting the rules, automaker officials said Monday.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said the department's
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
on Friday submitted its interpretive rule, "Resetting the
Corporate Average Fuel Economy Program
" to the White House for review.
The prior administration had "illegally used CAFE standards as a backdoor electric vehicle mandate - driving the price of cars up," he said in a statement.
Removing EVs from the calculations for credits and the regulatory mandates could result in lower overall fuel economy requirements.
NHTSA in June said it would hike CAFE requirements to about 50.4 miles per gallon (4.67 liters per 100 km) by 2031 from 39.1 mpg currently for light-duty vehicles.
Last year, 120 Republican lawmakers said NHTSA exceeded its authority by adopting fuel economy standards "that effectively mandate EVs while at the same time force the internal combustion engine out of the market."
The lawmakers said the agency "accounted for EVs in its regulatory baseline and factored that baseline into its determination of the maximum achievable CAFE standards."
House Republicans last week proposed killing the EV tax credit and repealing fuel efficiency rules designed to prod automakers into building more zero-emission vehicles as part of a broad-based tax reform bill.
Federal law requires NHTSA to set CAFE standards at the maximum feasible level.
The Environmental Protection Agency also plans to reconsider parallel vehicle emissions rules and rescind California's legal authority to ban sales of gas-only vehicles by 2035. The US Senate this week may take up legislation passed by the House to rescind the approval for California's rules. Automakers like General Motors and Toyota are aggressively lobbying for repeal.
NHTSA said last year the rule would reduce gasoline consumption by 64 billion gallons and cut emissions by 659 million metric tons. The agency said while some vehicles would be more expensive to buy, consumers would save on fuel costs with estimated net benefits of $35.2 billion.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
26 minutes ago
- Time of India
Zelenskyy shuns Russian demands, says open to direct talks with Putin
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Russia's maximalist demands mean there's no point in continuing with lower-level talks aimed at brokering an end to the war. Calling Russia's conditions for peace an "ultimatum," Zelenskyy said he remains willing to meet directly with President Vladimir Putin . But low-level talks such as those that took place in Istanbul on Monday make no sense unless they lead to a meeting of the two leaders, he said. "To continue diplomatic meetings in Istanbul at a level that does not resolve anything further is, in my opinion, meaningless," Zelenskyy told reporters in Kyiv Wednesday. Zelenskyy is upping the pressure on Putin after a pair of audacious attacks against Russian targets in recent days that represented an embarrassing setback for the Kremlin. US special envoy for Ukraine Keith Kellogg said yesterday that additional sanctions on Russian are "ready to drop," based on his conversation with Republican Senator Lindsey Graham. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Trading CFD dengan Teknologi dan Kecepatan Lebih Baik IC Markets Mendaftar Undo Speaking later on Wednesday, the head of Russia's delegation to the Istanbul talks, Vladimir Medinsky, reiterated that Russia wasn't immediately ready for a meeting between Putin and Zelenskyy. "We conveyed your position that a meeting at the level of heads of state is possible, but it needs to be substantively worked out with results," he told Putin during a meeting held on video conference. Speaking at the meeting, Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov told Putin the ongoing contacts with Ukraine in Turkey are "important and useful," adding they "produced concrete results." Live Events


Time of India
35 minutes ago
- Time of India
Multiple polls show Donald Trump's approval ratings shifting, is it a warning sign for the President?
What Polls Are Saying? Live Events FAQs (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Trump's approval ratings are rising in several new national polls. His ratings had gone up and down in recent months due to policies like tariffs, immigration plans, and cutting federal new rise could mean his support base is becoming stable again. If the ratings keep rising, it might help Republicans in elections and make things harder for Democrats, as per Newsweek the ActiVote poll May 1-31, 46% of people said they approve of Trump, while 50% do not. This is a small increase from 45% last month. It's the first time since January that his approval has gone up. The poll could be off by about 4.4%. This rating is better than Trump's average during his first term 41%, better than Biden's full-term average 41%, and better than Biden's last year 40%.The TIPP Insights poll May 28-30 showed Trump's approval at 43%, a small rise from 42%. His disapproval dropped from 47% to 45%. This poll could be off by 2.7%.Newsweek's tracker says Trump's approval is now 47%, up from 44% a month ago. Disapproval is at 50%.The AtlasIntel poll May 21-27 had Trump at 45% approval and 54% disapproval, which is his lowest rating in that poll this term. Earlier, his approval was between 46% and 50%. This poll could be off by 2%.Most polls show only 1-2 point changes, which is very small and could just be a normal error. Quantus Insights May 18-20 shows 48% approval and 48% disapproval , same as earlier in May. In April, approval was also 48% but disapproval was 50%. Civiqs May 17-20 showed Trump's approval up 1 point, disapproval down May 23-26 showed 44% approval, 52% disapproval. YouGov/Yahoo May 22-27 showed approval went down to 41% and disapproval went up to 54%. Morning Consult May 23-25 showed no change in approval, still 48%, but disapproval went up to 51%.RMG Research and Napolitan News May 20-29 showed Trump's approval up 1 point to 49%, disapproval stayed the same at 50%.John Zogby Strategies May 28-29 showed Trump's approval was the same as last month at 58%, while disapproval dropped by 1 point to 49%. All this data is from Newsweek many recent polls show a small rise in his could help him and Republicans, but it's too early to say for sure.


Time of India
41 minutes ago
- Time of India
Heavy metal duties kick in as US awaits 'best offers' from nations
PARIS: Washington doubled its tariffs on steel and aluminium imports on Wednesday, the same day President Donald Trump 's administration expects trading partners to make "best offers" to avoid other punishing import levies from taking effect in early July. European businesses called on the European Commission , which handles trade talks for the 27-nation EU to do everything it can to remove the tariffs, as the bloc's trade negotiator Maros Sefcovic met with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer here. Sefcovic said he "had a productive and constructive discussion" with Greer, without giving any detail on the talks. "We're advancing in the right direction at pace-and staying in close contact to maintain the momentum," Sefcovic said on X. Late on Tuesday, Trump signed an executive proclamation that activates from Wednesday a hike in the tariffs on imported steel and aluminium to 50% from the 25% rate introduced in March. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Live Comfortably: 60m2 prefabricated bungalow for the elderly in Phu My Pre Fabricated Homes | Search Ads Search Now "We started at 25 and then after studying the data more, realised that it was a big help, but more help is needed. And so that is why the 50 is starting tomorrow," White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett told a steel industry conference in Washington on Tuesday. The increase came into effect at 12:01 a.m. The increase applies to all trading partners except Britain, the only country so far to strike a preliminary trade agreement with the US during a 90-day pause on a wider array of Trump tariffs. The rate for steel and aluminium imports from the UK- which does not rank among the top exporters of either metal to the US-will remain at 25% until at least July 9. Live Events 'BEST OFFER' DUE DATE Wednesday is also when the White House expects trading partners to propose deals that might help them avoid Trump's hefty "reciprocal" tariffs on imports across the board from taking effect in five weeks. US officials have been in talks with several countries since Trump announced a pause on those tariffs on April 9, but so far only the UK deal has materialised and even that pact is essentially a preliminary framework for more talks. Reuters reported on Monday that Washington was asking countries to list their best proposals in a number of key areas. No Reprieve for Vietnam Washington will not reciprocate even if Hanoi removes all tariffs on American goods, according to US Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, as he said Vietnam re-exports a significant volume of Chinese products to the US. "Absolutely not, absolutely not. That would be the silliest thing we could do," Lutnick said when Republican Senator John Kennedy asked him if the US will respond in kind if Vietnam decides to eliminate all tariffs and trade barriers against American imports, and calling a potential agreement like that "a terrible deal."