A significant auto trade group on Thursday advised President-elect Donald Trump’s transition team to modify fuel effectiveness mandates that could cost them billions of dollars and required a full-scale evaluation of the Obama administration’s autonomous vehicle policies.
In an eight-page letter Thursday to Trump’s transition group revealed and reported earlier by Reuters, the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, which provides significant car manufacturers consisting of General Motors Co, Ford Motor Co and Toyota Motor Corp, urged the inbound Trump White House to find “pathway forward” on setting final fuel effectiveness standards through 2025, calling on the next administration to “harmonize and adjust” the rules.
The letter also advises Trump to produce a presidential advisory committee to “coordinate auto sector regulators” and said the panel might recommend a new method to vehicle policies.
Car manufacturers told Trump’s team in the letter “innovation and change are swamping the regulatory capacity to manage our emerging reality. Reform is vital.”
Major car manufacturers have raised concerns about the Obama administration’s enthusiastic targets for cutting vehicle greenhouse gas emissions through 2025, arguing low gas prices and weak demand for electrical automobiles might need significant revisions to the policies.
The car manufacturers’ letter advises the Trump administration to carry out a “detailed regulatory evaluation” of all guidelines and actions since September 1, including the Obama administration’s new guidance on self-driving vehicles.