Latest News

White House: Trump will rescind auto regulations based on climate change findings

The White House announced on Tuesday that U.S. president Donald Trump plans to formalize a move on Thursday to overturn the legal basis of federal greenhouse gas regulations from the Obama era, which will result in 'the repeal of vehicle emission?rules.

Karoline Leavitt, White House press secretary, told reporters that Trump would be joined by Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lee Zeldin at an event to formalize the revocation of President Barack Obama's 2009 scientific findings that carbon dioxide was harmful to human health.

She claimed that the action was the largest deregulation in U.S. History and estimated it would save automakers $2,400 on each vehicle.

This move is the most significant climate change policy rollback that Trump's Republican Administration has ever made. It follows a series of regulatory reductions and other moves designed to unfetter the development of fossil fuels and stymie clean energy rollout.

A spokesperson for the EPA said that the findings had been used by the Democratic Obama administration and Biden administrations "to justify trillions of dollars in 'greenhouse gas regulations on new vehicles and engines."

The former administration of Joe Biden introduced rules in 2024 that aimed to reduce tailpipe emissions from passenger vehicles by almost 50% by 2032, compared to projected levels for 2027.

The EPA predicted that between 35% and 56% new vehicles sold between 2030-2032 will need to be electrical, and that the rules will result in net benefits of $99 billion per year through 2055. This includes $46 billion saved in fuel costs and $16 billion saved in maintenance and repair expenses for drivers.

The average consumer is expected to save $6,000 on fuel and maintenance costs over the life of a new vehicle.

In September, a group of?major automobile manufacturers asked the EPA to reduce aggressive vehicle emission limits. However, they argued that the agency should still rewrite the Biden rules. They said the rules "still need to... be revised to achievable levels?to ensure certainty for the industry."

The Alliance for?Automotive?Innovation, which represents General Motors and Toyota as well as Volkswagen, said that a contingency planning is essential if GHG standards on motor vehicles are to be retained or reinstated?in any way.

The repeal will eliminate the regulatory requirements for measuring, reporting, certifying, and complying with federal GHG emissions standards for cars, trucks, and other vehicles.

(source: Reuters)