Monday, January 26, 2009

Obama begins reversing Bush climate policies

ABC News Online, 27 Jan 2009

US President Barack Obama has begun reversing the climate policies of the Bush administration, clearing the way for new rules to force car makers to produce more fuel-efficient and less polluting cars.

The President told the US Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider immediately a request by California to impose its own strict limits on vehicle carbon dioxide emissions, blamed for contributing to global warming.

The administration of former president George W Bush had denied the request, prompting California and other states to sue.

"The Federal Government must work with, not against, states to reduce greenhouse gas emissions," Mr Obama said at the White House, taking a stab at his predecessor's policies.

"California has shown bold and bipartisan leadership through its effort to 21st Century standards.

"And over a dozen states have followed its lead."

Mr Obama's directive, which is likely to result in a formal change in coming months, could prompt as many as 18 states to follow California's lead by putting into effect exhaust emissions standards that are tougher than federal requirements.

The President directed the Department of Transportation to move forward with setting vehicle fuel efficiency standards for model year 2011 by March, giving automakers an 18-month period to prepare.

The rules piled pressure on an ailing car industry struggling to survive in a deepening recession with the help of federal bailouts.

General Motors said it was "working aggressively" to develop better hybrids and electric cars to reduce emissions and improve mileage, but policymakers must weigh in economic factors when making their decision.

"We're ready to engage the Obama administration and Congress on policies that support meaningful and workable solutions and targets," the company said in a statement.

But their future may be more troubled as the US recession deepens.

Economists polled by Reuters in advance of Friday's Gross Domestic Product report think GDP contracted at a 5.4 per cent rate on an annualised basis in the fourth quarter, which would be the worst performance since 1982.


Signals on envrionment

The Obama directive pleased environmentalists, who supported his election but could annoy labor unions, another key constituency, whose members are embittered about the loss of auto jobs.

Mr Obama said the policy shift would help car makers in the long run.

"Our goal is not to further burden an already struggling industry, it is to help America's automakers prepare for the future," he said.

California's Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger urged the Obama administration last week to review the pollution emissions decision.

"It is clear that California and the environment now have a strong ally in the White House," he said in a statement, welcoming the move on Monday.

"Allowing California and other states to aggressively reduce their own harmful vehicle tailpipe emissions would be a historic win for clean air and for millions of Americans who want more fuel-efficient, environmentally friendly cars."

Democratic lawmakers in Washington hailed the measure as a step toward energy independence and clean air, but some Republicans accused him of setting back the struggling US auto industry.

The moves signalled Mr Obama's desire to move forward quickly with his campaign promises to fight climate change and reduce US dependence on foreign oil.

Mr Obama laid out broad principles that he said his administration would follow.

It was time for the United States to lead on climate change, he said, and reduce its dependence on foreign oil.

"It will be the policy of my administration to reverse our dependence on foreign oil," he said.

"We need more than the same old empty promises.

"We need to show that this time it will be different."

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has named a special envoy for climate change and declared the "time for realism and action is now."

Her appointment of Todd Stern, a veteran of the Kyoto Protocol talks, signalled how seriously President Barack Obama's administration sees the threat from climate change.

Mr Stern coordinated the Clinton administration's Initiative on Global Climate Change from 1997 to 1999 and acted as the senior White House negotiator in the Kyoto negotiations on climate change.

- Reuters

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