Obama takes aim at climate-warming car emissions

WASHINGTON,  (Reuters) – President Barack Obama took  aim at climate-warming greenhouse gases yesterday and ordered  the struggling auto industry to make more fuel-efficient cars  under tough new national standards to cut emissions and  increase gas mileage. 
 
Obama said the standards, announced at a White House  ceremony attended by auto industry and union leaders, would  reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil and give five years of  cost certainty to an industry battling to survive.  

“The status quo is no longer acceptable,” Obama said in an  announcement that will pressure carmakers to transform and  modernize the industry to produce more efficient vehicles.  

“We have done little to increase fuel efficiency of  America’s cars and trucks for decades,” he said, calling the  standards the start of a transition to a clean energy economy. 
 
Obama has made fighting climate change a priority, and  lawmakers in Congress have begun wrangling over a historic bill  many hope will provide broader guidelines for controlling  greenhouse gas emissions. 

Growing public support for efforts to battle climate change  and the weakened state of the U.S. auto industry, which is  staying afloat through federal bailouts and restructuring at  the government’s direction, gave Obama a window of opportunity  to impose the rules. 
 
Criticism of Obama’s announcement was limited, and focused  on the higher production costs, the safety concerns created by  producing lighter cars and fears from some observers about  increasing government involvement in the industry.  

“The government is now designing our cars. It’s out of the  hands of vehicle manufacturers,” said auto industry consultant  Larry Rinek.
  
Under the new standards, U.S. passenger vehicles and light  trucks must average 35.5 miles per gallon (6.62 litres/100km)  by 2016. The current law, approved by the Bush administration,  requires a similar gain by 2020. 
 
Obama said the new standards would save 1.8 billion barrels  of oil over the lifetime of the program — the equivalent of  taking 58 million cars off the road for a year. 
 
The Environmental Protection Agency would regulate and  reduce tailpipe emissions for the first time under the  standards.  

The U.S. Congress does not have to approve the standards,  which will be implemented through rules developed by the  Department of Transportation and Environmental Protection  Agency, which could take more than a year to complete.
  
The plan was praised by automakers, environmentalists and  an array of politicians, but it will mean higher price tags for  consumers. The new program will add about $1,300 to the price  of producing a vehicle.  
Obama said car buyers would recoup the money with the lower  fuel costs realized under more efficient mileage standards.