Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Truck Makers Pledge to Comply With New California Rules Phasing out Gas-Powered Vehicles
By admin
Published 2 years ago on
July 7, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Some of the nation’s largest truck makers on Thursday pledged to stop selling new gas-powered vehicles in California by the middle of the next decade, part of an agreement with state regulators aimed at preventing lawsuits that threatened to delay or block the state’s emission standards.

California is trying to rid itself of fossil fuels, passing new rules in recent years to phase out gas-powered carstruckstrains and lawn equipment in the nation’s most populous state.

It will take years before all of those rules fully take effect. But already some industries are pushing back. Last month, the railroad industry sued the California Air Resources Board to block new rules that would ban older locomotives and require companies to purchase zero-emission equipment.

Thursday’s announcement means lawsuits are less likely to delay similar rules for the trucking industry. The companies agreed to follow California’s rules, which include banning the sale of new gas-powered trucks by 2036. In the meantime, California regulators agreed to loosen some of their emission standards for diesel trucks. The state agreed to use the federal emission standard starting in 2027, which is lower than what the California rules would have been.

California regulators also agreed to let these companies continue to sell more older diesel engines over the next three years, but only if they also sell zero-emission vehicles to offset the emissions from those older trucks.

The agreement also clears the way for other states to adopt California’s same standards without worrying about whether the rules would be upheld in court, said Steven Cliff, executive officer of the California Air Resources Board. That means more trucks nationally would follow these rules. Cliff said about 60% of the truck vehicle miles traveled in California come from trucks that arrive from other states.

“I think that this sets the stage for a national framework for zero emission trucks,” Cliff said. “It’s a really stringent California-only rule, or a slightly less stringent national rule. We still win in the national scenario.”

The agreement includes some of the largest truck makers in the world, including Cummins Inc., Daimler Truck North America, Ford Motor Company, General Motors Company, Hino Motors Limited Inc, Isuzu Technical Center of American Inc., Navistar Inc, Paccar Inc., Stellantis NV, and Volvo Group North America. The agreement also includes the Truck and Engine Manufacturing Association.

“This agreement enables the regulatory certainty we all need to prepare for a future which will include ever increasing volumes of low and zero-emissions technologies,” said Michael Noonan, director of product certification and compliance for Navistar.

Big Rigs Produced More Pollution

Heavy-duty trucks like big rigs and buses use diesel engines, which are more powerful than gasoline engines but also produce much more pollution. California has lots of these trucks that ferry freight to and from the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, two of the busiest ports in the world.

While these trucks make up 3% of vehicles on the road, they account for more than half of nitrogen oxides and fine particle diesel pollution, according to the California Air Resources board. It’s had a big impact on California cities. Of the top 10 most ozone-polluted cities in the U.S., six are in California, according to the American Lung Association

Mariela Ruacho, clean air advocacy manager for the American Lung Association, said the agreement is “great news” that “shows California is a leader when it comes to clean air.” But Ruacho said she wants to know how the agreement will change estimates of health benefits for Californians. The rules regulators adopted in April included an estimated $26.6 billion in health care savings from fewer asthma attacks, emergency room visits and other respiratory illnesses.

“We really want to see an analysis of what if any emission loss would be and what that means for health benefits,” she said.

Cliff said regulators are working to update those health estimates. But he noted those estimates were based on banning the sale of new gas-powered trucks by 2036 — a rule that is still in place.

“We’re getting all the benefits that would have been,” he said. “We’re essentially locking that in.”

California has reached similar agreements int the past. In 2019, four major automakers agreed to toughen standards for gas mileage and greenhouse gas emissions.

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Newly Released JFK Files Reveal More About CIA but Don’t Yet Point to Conspiracies

DON'T MISS

Zelenskyy and Putin Have Agreed to a Limited Ceasefire

DON'T MISS

Trump to Order a Plan to Shut Down the US Education Department

DON'T MISS

Feds Search for Longtime LA Gang Leader Suspected of Murder and Human Trafficking

DON'T MISS

Jury Finds Greenpeace Liable for Hundreds of Millions in Damages

DON'T MISS

California’s Wine Industry Leery of Tariffs, but Some Growers Hope They Help

DON'T MISS

Butler Does It All as Warriors Don’t Need Curry to Clip Bucks

DON'T MISS

What Is This Continued Carnage in Gaza Achieving?

DON'T MISS

Brothers of Laken Riley’s Killer to Be Deported After Pleading Guilty to Fake Green Cards

DON'T MISS

Bank Seeks $105 Million, Foreclosure on Some of John Vidovich’s Ag Properties

UP NEXT

California’s Wine Industry Leery of Tariffs, but Some Growers Hope They Help

UP NEXT

Bank Seeks $105 Million, Foreclosure on Some of John Vidovich’s Ag Properties

UP NEXT

Newsom Accelerates Fresno County Solar Project Powering 300K Homes

UP NEXT

Violent Attacks on Tesla Dealerships Spike as Musk Joins Trump Administration

UP NEXT

Hollywood Filmmaker Charged with Defrauding Netflix in $11M Scheme

UP NEXT

Tesla Short Sellers Cash In $16 Billion as Stock Plummets

UP NEXT

Tesla Vehicles Defaced in Overnight Attack at California Dealership

UP NEXT

Protests Planned All Over California to Oppose Medicaid, SNAP Funding Cuts

UP NEXT

Newsom Tries ‘Burner Phone’ Strategy to Connect with Tech CEOs

UP NEXT

‘They Didn’t Lift a Damn Finger’: California Crime Victim Fund Ordered to Change Practices

Feds Search for Longtime LA Gang Leader Suspected of Murder and Human Trafficking

14 hours ago

Jury Finds Greenpeace Liable for Hundreds of Millions in Damages

14 hours ago

California’s Wine Industry Leery of Tariffs, but Some Growers Hope They Help

14 hours ago

Butler Does It All as Warriors Don’t Need Curry to Clip Bucks

14 hours ago

What Is This Continued Carnage in Gaza Achieving?

15 hours ago

Brothers of Laken Riley’s Killer to Be Deported After Pleading Guilty to Fake Green Cards

15 hours ago

Bank Seeks $105 Million, Foreclosure on Some of John Vidovich’s Ag Properties

15 hours ago

Newsom’s New CA Homelessness Plan Leaves Out Some Important Details

16 hours ago

Westlands’ New Science Adviser Brings Deep Knowledge of Fish

17 hours ago

Will Vang Win Fresno Council Seat Outright? It Could Go Down to the Wire

17 hours ago

Newly Released JFK Files Reveal More About CIA but Don’t Yet Point to Conspiracies

DALLAS — Newly released documents related to President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963 gave curious readers more details Wedne...

13 hours ago

13 hours ago

Newly Released JFK Files Reveal More About CIA but Don’t Yet Point to Conspiracies

13 hours ago

Zelenskyy and Putin Have Agreed to a Limited Ceasefire

Education Secretary Linda McMahon arrives before President Donald Trump addresses a joint session of Congress at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, March 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis)
13 hours ago

Trump to Order a Plan to Shut Down the US Education Department

14 hours ago

Feds Search for Longtime LA Gang Leader Suspected of Murder and Human Trafficking

A jury ruled in favor of Energy Transfer, awarding damages against Greenpeace, which argued the lawsuit threatened free speech rights. (Shutterstock)
14 hours ago

Jury Finds Greenpeace Liable for Hundreds of Millions in Damages

14 hours ago

California’s Wine Industry Leery of Tariffs, but Some Growers Hope They Help

14 hours ago

Butler Does It All as Warriors Don’t Need Curry to Clip Bucks

15 hours ago

What Is This Continued Carnage in Gaza Achieving?

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend