For More Information:
Contact Christopher Phelps
(860) 231-8842
Cleaner Cars to Hit the Fast Lane as a Result of Connecticut and Presidential Leadership
West Hartford, CT—President Obama will announce today that the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Transportation will establish
a uniform federal standard to reduce global warming pollution from cars and
light trucks and improve vehicle efficiency.The standard, which will be the first ever federal global warming
standard for vehicles, will largely mirror the standard already adopted by Connecticut and 13 other states.
“We’re
thrilled by this announcement to put cleaner cars on the road.President Obama is putting America in the fast lane in the race to a
clean energy economy.This historic
action will reduce our nation’s dependence on oil, save consumers money at the
pump, and cut global warming pollution.This is what leadership looks like,” said Environment Connecticut
Program Director, Christopher Phelps.
The
standard will reduce global warming pollution from new vehicles by 30 percent
and achieve an average fuel economy of 35.5 miles per gallon by 2016 – four years
earlier than under current law.According to the White House, the program will save 1.8 billion barrels
of oil and reduce global warming pollution by 900 million metric tons, which is
equivalent to eliminating the pollution from 177 million of today’s cars or 194
coal plants.
“Today’s
action was made possible by the leadership of clean car supporters in Connecticut and the 13 other states that have
adopted the program. In Connecticut, Senator Donald Williams led the
charge to pass the Clean Cars law in 2004. We wouldn’t be here today if it
weren’t for such trailblazingefforts to
reduce our oil dependence and work to solve global warming,” concluded Phelps.
Background:
* Environment Connecticut worked
to adopt the clean cars standards in Connecticut in
2004.
* Passenger
vehicles are the second largest source of global warming pollution nationwide.
* The
Clean Air Act allows (1) California to set auto emission standards that are stronger than
federal standards (no such standards currently exist); and (2) other states to
adopt California’s auto emission standards.
* In 2005,
California adopted first-of-their-kind
standards requiring cars and light-duty trucks to limit their global warming
pollution.A total of 13 other
states—Arizona, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New
Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, and
Washington—have adopted the tailpipe standards.Several additional states are actively considering adopting the
standards.
* In 2007,
Congress passed the first increase in fuel economy standards in 32 years; those
standards require an average fuel economy of 35 mile-per-gallon by 2020.