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  • Kansas Reflector

    Nebraska, other attorneys general challenge California regulation on big trucks

    By Aaron Sanderford,

    16 hours ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0KZ0Vy_0vZoK8FS00

    Trucks drive down the New Jersey Turnpike in Elizabeth, New Jersey. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

    LINCOLN — Nebraska, Kansas and 22 other Republican-led states asked the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on Monday to block a push by Democratic-led California to require more trucks used for transporting goods to reduce carbon emissions.

    Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers, who led the effort, argued in a letter that California is overstepping its authority and risks harming commerce beyond its borders. He and the other attorneys general wrote that forcing a shift from diesel fuel to electric energy could lead to higher prices for food, fuel and more consumer goods.

    “California lacks the legal authority to export its electric truck mandate to the rest of the country,” the letter says. “Granting this waiver would be unconstitutional because it would allow California to regulate motor vehicles in a manner that no other state can.”

    The letter was signed by leaders in Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, West Virginia and Wyoming.

    Federal waiver needed

    California needs a federal waiver from the EPA to enforce stricter emissions standards on medium-duty and heavy-duty trucks because the federal Clean Air Act prevents most states from setting individual standards without a waiver.

    The Golden State has long been a national trendsetter for vehicle emissions. For decades, Republican and Democratic presidential administrations and the EPA have let California set its own standards to address air quality.

    The Biden administration, which has prioritized fighting climate change, could be inclined to approve the change. The same states have sued separately to stop the waiver if the EPA grants it.

    The attorneys general said giving California influence over fleet trucks would raise the costs of logistics and business far beyond the state’s borders. They argued it would violate the separate and equal sovereignty of the states.

    Rural states face risks

    Hilgers, like many of his farm-state peers, argued in the letter that biofuels risk being harmed. Rural elected officials have argued that requiring electric vehicles doesn’t work in their regions because they lack the charging infrastructure.

    The AGs also argued rural states would be disproportionately affected by the resulting higher costs for traditional trucks and trucking, which they say would follow a zero-emissions mandate.

    The attorneys also argued that a 1994 federal law governing the Federal Aviation Administration prohibits states from regulating prices, routes and services of motor carriers. The letter argues that the California regulation would do so.

    California said in its waiver application that it needs to regulate trucking emissions to curb smog and improve air quality and public health, as well as meet state goals of combating climate change by transitioning to alternate energy sources.

    The application argues the pollutants from diesel vehicles are disproportionately damaging air quality in disadvantaged neighborhoods located near ports and highways.

    California’s Advanced Clean Fleets regulation would require all medium- and heavy-duty truck fleets in the state to be zero-emission by 2045 and by 2035 for the heaviest duty trucks, including those that transport goods from shipyards to rail yards.

    Nebraska Examiner, a States Newsroom affiliate, produced this story .

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    ForeverAHusker
    1h ago
    Dictator Newsome will Never tell me what vehicle I can and can't drive. He can't even run his dumpster fire of a state! He had already pulled funding for educational personnel traveling to "red states" because we will not allow "gender affirming care for youth under 18 years of age". He is forcing EVs in his state, which the power grid can't handle and has done nothing to upgrade the power grid. How are those rolling brownouts going for you? brown outs are not good for electric devices, or has no one told that moron? There are Republicans in California, but they don't have a voice and this dictator tells them to "shut up and sit down," because he doesn't care about their opinion. When is this moron going to be voted out for insubordination?
    Shelley Osterloh Anderson
    8h ago
    Can't blame California for wanting to cut emissions, has anyone seen the smog from vehicle exhausts?
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