Praise for a Climate Policy in Regression?
The praise keeps pouring in for the Administration’s recent first steps toward withdrawing EPA’s objections to California's effort to implement tough emission standards for automobiles. I wrote about this earlier, pointing out that Congress needs to act quickly or get left behind.
Today’s editorial page of the Washington Post suggests that the most effective action might not be regulation at all, or at least not regulation alone -- state or federal. The editorial writers at the Post say the best way to proceed would be to “change the incentives so that people want to buy fuel-efficient vehicles; then companies will make such cars, even without commands from Washington.”
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The Obama Administration has taken the first steps toward withdrawing EPA’s objections to a California's effort to implement tough emission standards for automobiles. Could that be bad news for those hungry for federal action on transportation emissions?
At first glance, the news seems to be a win for federal leadership, since the lifting of the roadblock in Washington makes California's efforts possible. But the roadblock's removal could soon be seen as a victory for the states. And that could end up leaving Washington's aspirations to lead the regulation of emissions from cars in the dust.
For years, the Bush administration rebuffed California's effort to regulate carbon emissions from cars, officially a waiver of a Clean Air Act allowing the state to regulate greenhouse gases (GHGs) in automobiles. The automobile industry has objected strongly to state-based regulation efforts, stating that different standards in different states are confusing and expensive. In practice, state standard-making forces the industry to design cars to meet all standards, which means the decision is up to the strictest state with a market that the autos can't ignore. Enter the California Air Resources Board.
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