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Tesla calls on Trump administration to maintain vehicle emission rules

Tesla, a manufacturer of electric vehicles, urged the Trump Administration not to repeal the vehicle emission standards or the longstanding U.S. conclusion that greenhouse gas emissions are harmful to human health. Tesla stated in comments published on Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency proposal to repeal standards would "give a pass to all engine and vehicle manufactures for measurement, control and reporting of GHG emission for any highway vehicle and engine." Earlier this year, a group of automakers including General Motors, Toyota, Volkswagen, and almost all others asked the EPA for a rollback on its aggressive vehicle emission limits, which are intended to force the industry into building a growing number of electric cars. Tesla could lose billions in regulatory credits over the next few years due to the Trump administration's decision to dismantle green vehicle regulations.

Tesla reported that it earned $2.8 billion last year from regulatory credits from the sale of zero-emission EVs and sold those credits to automakers who were trying to meet vehicle emission targets.

At an Ohio Republican Senator Bernie Moreno's hearing in July, he said that the costs paid by automakers to Tesla in order to comply with regulations were "outrageous".

Tesla stated that the EPA's proposal "undermines this program and diminishes performance-based incentives for electric vehicle manufacturers under the standards. It also creates an unfair playing field - reducing investment in vehicle innovations."

Tesla has begun spending $25 per vehicle on environmentally friendly air conditioning in 2019.

Tesla stated that "this investment amounted to millions of dollars when multiplied by the millions of vehicles manufactured for North America from this time." Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla, was an adviser to U.S. president Donald Trump before their public spat earlier this year. Trump said Musk was against a budget bill because it removed consumer tax credits on electric vehicles. These will expire on September 30, according to Musk.

The administration informed automakers in July that they would not be fined for failing to meet fuel-efficiency rules going back to 2022.

In June, Trump signed a resolution under the Congressional Review Act that disapproved of California's historic plan to stop the sale of gasoline only vehicles by 2035.

(source: Reuters)