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Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Automakers in the U.S. may be getting more than they expected from the Trump administration's effort to  loosen pollution control laws for automobiles. The Trump administration's effort to change automobile fuel efficiency and pollution laws will run into challenges from the state of California which is allowed to set its own rules under the Clean Air Act.

This would create two different markets inside the U.S. one following California type stricter rules for fuel efficiency and mileage, and for pollution, and a different market with looser laws for the rest of the country. This is something the automakers face as unintended consequences of their actions to loosen the fuel efficiency legislation.

Wall Street Journal Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Holman Jenkins makes some good points as the auto companies in Detroit look for government rescue. He suggests dumping CAFE altogether if Congress is serious about conservation, a gas tax would be the only intellectually honest thing to do. In the light of falling gas prices in November 2008 with $1.98 a gallon in Michigan and across the country, how will demand for hybrids and the Chevy Volt at $40,000 fare? Its hard to tell but some serious thinking about energy and automobiles is in order. Congressional mandates have a tendency to have poor consequences as Holman mentions, because of the loopholes in the mandates like the fuel mileage rules that allowed fleet averages, loopholes Detroit automakers used to lead the trucks and SUV boom to coverup hidden problems for so long. Some of these had to do with the UAW's insistence on rules and benefits and things like the Jobs Banks that were obsolete in a age of globalized manufacturing and unequal playing fields with the Japanese and Koreans in mostly unuionized factories in the southern United States. Some of them with lack of effort, vision and innovation by Detroit car companies to make the fuel efficient technologies to reduce costly fuel imports, and the failure to bridge the union management divide that has been there all the time in the postwar period skewing decisions and leading to obsolete behaviours. Holman sees nationalization of the auto companies as the only possibility given the car companies history and failures, with or without bankruptcy. Even then he does not see them becoming competitive without good leadership and right policies in running the companies and honest policy at the government level, and courage to get a firm grip on reality. ...
New York Times Original article ›
LyrArc Article Gist
Carmakers around the world are finally getting it. Customers want vehicles that deliver better mileage and lower emissions and are environmentally friendly. And their is now a race among the automakers to see who can get there first. After the sea change at the Frankfurt Auto Show, the same is expected t happen at the Tokyo Auto Show thats coming up with a large numbert of new technologies, hybrids and environment friendly vehicles on display there. Lawrence Burns, V.P for R&D and Strategic Planning at GM points to this new DNA for the automobile. Maynard says GM plans to introduce a new hybrid version of its lineup every 3 months for the next 4 years, 16 in all. Mullaly of Ford and Juim Press at Chrysler are committed to pushing forward. And Toyota is beginning its development of a vehicle that would compete with GM's Volt which would run on electricity.

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