Biden's EV policy adds sticks to the carrots - Sol-Up Solar

Regulators, mount upThe Environmental Protection Agency is expected to float tough vehicle pollution rules this week that would speed transition to electric cars and trucks, Ben writes.

The big picture: While the new climate law relies heavily on tax incentives, the Biden administration is wielding prescriptive regulations to drive clean tech, too.

Why it matters: Transportation is the country’s largest source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Zoom in: The New York Times reports the draft rules would effectively require EVs to account for 54%-60% of new car sales by 2030 and 64%-67% in 2032.

The Washington Post has the same figures, but notes they represent the most stringent of several options in the rule.

How it works: EPA auto rules don’t specifically require EV levels, but strong CO2 emissions standards are a de facto mandate.

That’s because more efficient gas-powered models alone can’t achieve the required fleet-wide carbon cuts.

Yes, but: EPA did not confirm the EV levels the NYT and WaPo reported, telling Axios “the proposal process is not yet final.”

Driving the news: Two draft emissions rules are expected this week, a federal source confirms, speaking anonymously ahead of the rollout.

  • One addresses light-duty vehicles — cars, SUVs, pickups — from model years 2027-2032.
  • The other sets rules for heavy-duty vehicles and engines.

What we’re watching: The fine print. Officials will likely reveal more about how they see the climate law and 2021 infrastructure law driving market evolution.

What they’re saying: Automakers are wary, even as the industry invests heavily in EVs.

  • “A clear-eyed assessment of market readiness is required. The answer on rule feasibility is: it depends,” states a memo from the Alliance for Automotive Innovation.
  • Much depends on charging availability, supply chains and other variables, the industry group said.

What we don’t know: Whether the rules will survive litigation that follows almost all big regulations once they’re finalized. They could also be softened by a change in White House control.

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