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Fuel Fossils.


The Auto Industry Fights To Save Gas Guzzlers

From 1992 to 1997, the number of sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) on American roads doubled, to a whopping 13.8 million vehicles. In the same period, the category of "light trucks" (which includes pickups and vans) gained national hegemony, outnumbering cars for the first time. The result of the SUV craze is a marked decline in automakers' average fuel economy, from 25.9 miles per gallon Noun 1. miles per gallon - the distance traveled in a vehicle powered by one gallon of gasoline or diesel fuel
unit, unit of measurement - any division of quantity accepted as a standard of measurement or exchange; "the dollar is the United States unit of
 (mpg) in 1988 to just 23.8 mpg in 1999.

The cars going into America's junkyards today are more fuel-efficient than those in the showrooms, which was hardly Congress' intent when it passed the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) law in 1975. CAFE, which holds car companies to a strict fuel economy limit and fines them if they exceed it, definitely worked--at first. From 1975 to 1989, the Sierra Club Sierra Club, national organization in the United States dedicated to the preservation and expansion of the world's parks, wildlife, and wilderness areas. Founded (1892) in California by a group led by the Scottish-American conservationist John Muir, the Sierra Club  reports, the law doubled fuel economy. "It's clear that the standards have had a positive effect on fuel economy, which would be much lower had they not been in place" says David Greene David Greene (born June 22, 1982 in Snellville, Georgia) is an American football quarterback who is currently on the practice squad of the New England Patriots of the National Football League. Prior to signing with the Patriots, the quarterback spent time with the Seattle Seahawks. , a corporate research fellow at the Center for Transportation Analysis and author of the report Why CAFE Worked. But as Americans buy 13-mpg Ford Excursions and Chevrolet Suburbans, mileage has been creeping backwards.

Environmentalists champion a toughening of the CAFE standards, but fierce auto industry lobbying has kept that from happening for a decade. The rules, written at a time when most SUVs were used strictly as work vehicles, hold light trucks to a very loose standard (20.7 mpg, versus 27.5 mpg for cars). Efforts to close the SUV loophole have been stymied for four years by an anti-environmental rider to the annual transportation bill, which prevents the Clinton administration Noun 1. Clinton administration - the executive under President Clinton
executive - persons who administer the law
 from even studying CAFE.

Although the rider is still in place, it became apparent in late 1999 that the political ground is shifting. Environmental lobbyists alarmed the auto industry last September by lining up 40 U.S. senators to vote for a Clean Car Resolution calling for the rider's removal.

The Sierra Club's Dan Becker, an energy campaigner, served on a Presidential commission that recommended raising the CAFE bar to 45 mpg for cars and 34 mpg for trucks. Although the pro-CAFE Congressional resolution did not pass, Becker says that signing on 40 senators was a major victory. "We definitely have the auto industry's attention," he says.

The Club coordinated the mailing of 50,000 constituent postcards to home state senators urging an increase in CAFE, but a riled-up auto industry (aided in particular by Michigan's Congressional delegation), responded with a well-financed campaign to sway senators' votes in seven key states. Anti-CAFE ads paid for by the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is the world's largest not-for-profit federation of businesses, representing more than 3 million businesses and organizations in the United States. As of 2003, the chamber was comprised of 3000 state and local chambers and 830 business associations.  warned, with no real basis, that CAFE would abolish "full-sized" cars and trucks. One ad showed a rugged-looking farmer posing with his truck and strategically placed hay bales. "Farming's tough enough with healthy-sized pickups. Imagine hauling feed barrels around in a subcompact sub·com·pact  
n.
An automobile smaller than a compact.

Noun 1. subcompact - a car smaller than a compact car
subcompact car
," the copy read. "Say No to a CAFE Increase."

Michelle Robinson, a senior advocate for transportation at the Union of Concerned Scientists The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) is a nonprofit advocacy group based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. The UCS membership includes many private citizens in addition to professional scientists.  (UCS (Universal Character Set) An ISO/IEC format for coding character sets. ISO/IEC 10646 was synchronized with Unicode; however, Unicode adds additional constraints, and compliance with 10646 does not guarantee compatibility with Unicode. See Unicode. ), says the CAFE freeze riders are themselves a sign of a worried auto industry. "They're concerned that the administration and the Department of Transportation might actually take some action" she says.

UCS developed its own SUV, the Exemplar (a customized Ford Explorer
See also Ford Explorer Sport Trac for the spinoff pickup truck version


The Ford Explorer is a mid-size sport utility vehicle sold in North America and built by the Ford Motor Company since 1990.
), to demonstrate that it could get 28.4-mpg fuel economy and a 75 percent reduction in emissions by spending what amounted to $700 per car. "It just took some minor tweaks in the engine and other components," says Robinson. "The bottom line with the car companies is that they don't have to make their trucks more fuel-efficient, so why should they?" The domestic industry's recalcitrance is not shared by Honda and Toyota, both of which are introducing 60-mpg-plus hybrid cars on the U.S. market this year.

It's not that the American automakers can't comply. Internal Ford Motor Company documents posted on a web site critical to the company (www.blueovalnews.com) revealed that Ford had completed research that would enable its trucks to be 15 percent more fuel-efficient, as well as meet the tough air-quality standards proposed by the Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and .

The Clinton administration has not been a leader in fighting for fuel-efficiency standards. Environmentalists urged President Clinton to veto the rider-bearing transportation bill, but he chose not to do so, despite alleged behind-the-scenes lobbying by Vice President Al Gore Noun 1. Al Gore - Vice President of the United States under Bill Clinton (born in 1948)
Albert Gore Jr., Gore
. In public, Gore has said nothing about CAFE, citing a need to follow the President's lead. His rival for the Democratic Presidential nomination, former New Jersey Senator Bill Bradley For other uses, see Bill Bradley (disambiguation) and William Bradley.
William Warren "Bill" Bradley (born July 28, 1943) is an American hall of fame basketball player, Rhodes scholar, and former U.S.
, has done more. In a September letter to the U.S. Public Interest Research Group, Bradley proclaimed the transportation rider "offensive" adding that it "has had the effect of allowing loopholes in the current law to mushroom."

Gore's silence sends various signals. Environmentalists Becker and Robinson say they believe Gore to have been sincere in opposing the CAFE rider, and in arguing that case to President Clinton. But the auto industry thinks Gore is starting to "get it." An editorial in the Detroit News claimed that Clinton had passed on a veto precisely to benefit Gore's sputtering A popular method for adhering thin films onto a substrate. Sputtering is done by bombarding a target material with a charged gas (typically argon) which releases atoms in the target that coats the nearby substrate. It all takes place inside a magnetron vacuum chamber under low pressure.  campaign in auto states like Michigan. "The auto industry may have found a friend in Al Gore, [who] won't brag about that, at least not while his environmental buddies are listening," the editorial said.

A second front in the war against CAFE claims that the law is killing Americans by "mandating" they drive smaller cars. That was the theme of a lengthy piece in USA Today USA Today

National U.S. daily general-interest newspaper, the first of its kind. Launched in 1982 by Allen Neuharth, head of the Gannett newspaper chain, it reached a circulation of one million within a year and surpassed two million in the 1990s.
 last July. More than 40,000 people died in crashes they could have survived in heavier vehicles, the newspaper claimed. The theory, cited by automakers trying to repeal CAFE altogether, ignores the fact that SUVs present significant rollover A graphic element in an application or on a Web page that changes its color or shape when the pointer is moved (rolled) over it. See JavaScript rollover. See also n-key rollover.  risk in accidents, making them just as dangerous overall as passenger cars.

David Greene, whose work is supported by Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) is a multiprogram science and technology national laboratory managed for the United States Department of Energy by UT-Battelle, LLC. ORNL is located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, near Knoxville. , calls the dangerous small car theory "demonstrably false" Greene points out that cars were getting smaller and lighter before CAFE went into effect, and that a vehicle's distribution of mass is often as much a factor in crash survivability sur·viv·a·ble  
adj.
1. Capable of surviving: survivable organisms in a hostile environment.

2. That can be survived: a survivable, but very serious, illness.
 as is its size. Also, SUV occupants do well only when crashing into smaller vehicles (which often ride underneath the SUV'S high bumpers). In one-car accidents and barrier crashes, he says, "It often doesn't matter how big your vehicle is--you can be dead, very dead or extremely dead. The bottom line is that if I buy a large SUV or pickup, I'm in effect imposing a safety risk on everyone else which might be greater than the safety benefit to me."

Environmentalists vow to continue the fight for tougher CAFE standards. CONTACT: Union of Concerned Scientists, 1616 P Street NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20036/(202)332-0900.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Earth Action Network, Inc.
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Title Annotation:fuel economy regulations
Author:Motavalli, Jim
Publication:E
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jan 1, 2000
Words:1144
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