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National Press Release
![]() | Study Finds Double Regulating Fuel Economy by States Harmful to Struggling Auto IndustryPublished 2009-01-23 10:07By National Automobile Dealers Association |


Industry Needs Single National Standard, Not Patchwork of State Regulations
"With new national fuel economy standards expected to be finalized by the Obama administration by
Regan added that a major slump in auto sales forced 900 dealerships to close their doors in 2008 and put the domestic automakers in the difficult position of needing billions in bridge loans from the federal government to prevent bankruptcy. GM and Chrysler have already received
"It makes no sense for the federal government to aid the auto industry with one hand, and then burden it with a duplicative rule that regulates fuel economy completely differently than the federal government," Regan continued.
To date, the debate over CARB's bid to regulate fuel economy on a state level has been focused on the manner in which the "
The report, entitled Patchwork Proven: Why A Single National Fuel Economy Standard Is Better for America Than A Patchwork of State Regulations, found:
-- The patchwork would exist in thirteen states, Washington, D.C., and
Bernalillo County, NM, which account for over 40% of the nation's
new car market. Pennsylvania would not be part of the patchwork because
it bases compliance on complying in California.
-- An automaker could comply in California and offer the exact same choice
of vehicles in another CARB state, and yet still not be in compliance,
solely due to differing consumer demand for different types of vehicles.
-- If the patchwork were to take effect in all 50 states, it would result
in a 50-state patchwork, as an automaker would still have to manage 50
unique state fleets to individually meet CARB's standard 50 times.
-- The patchwork would create the "cross border sales loophole,"
as CARB's regulation does not regulate cars imported from non-CARB
states that are registered in CARB states.
-- The patchwork reopens the SUV loophole; and
-- Several automakers and potentially new entrants from China and India
would be exempt from CARB's regulation until 2016, provided they
limit their sales in California.
Patchwork Proven shows that a single, national fuel economy standard is the best way to save fuel and reduce greenhouse gases from motor vehicles. A federal mileage standard provides that certainty and stability, giving automakers a road map to produce the fuel-efficient cars of tomorrow. CARB's patchwork regime - with its exemptions, loopholes, and unintended consequences - would prolong the economic dislocation in the auto sector for little to no environmental benefit.
"In light of the extraordinary economic challenges facing the country and the fact that the federal government is now a stakeholder in two domestic automakers, policymakers must closely consider whether now is the right time to regulate fuel economy twice under two different systems," Regan added. "Since Congress had not acted to increase fuel economy standards when
EDITOR'S NOTE: The full report can be found at www.NADA.org/patchwork
SOURCE National Automobile Dealers Association








