through hope crystal
The U.S. agency’s final rules on vehicle emissions give manufacturers more time to transition to electric fleets but set ambitious standards for the future.
Last month, the EPA announced final rules for vehicles Emissions will reduce air pollutants from passenger cars, light trucks and medium-duty vehicles.
In an update to the proposed rule issued in April 2023, the agency largely retained the strict 2032 target but softened near-term goals for the 2027 to 2032 model years.
Overall, we believe the ambition of long-term standards is consistent with Joe Biden’s desire to reduce carbon emissions, but also believe their future trajectory may be significantly affected by the next presidential administration.
This means that a new, more modest near-term path for electric vehicles (EVs) by 2030 will require It would account for about 45% of total vehicles sold by original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) (down from the 60% previously proposed by the EPA) and involve a gradual phasing in of CO2 emissions limits from 2027 to 2029.
Increased flexibility among early-stage OEMs should ease the pressure on slow EV adoption caused by the current mismatch between EV supply and demand.
We believe the EPA’s extended phase-in should benefit legacy OEMs and automotive suppliers, as the final rule allows for more time to transition to electric vehicles given less stringent near-term targets.
The “buffer period” from 2027 to 2029 should give lagging automakers and auto suppliers time to catch up and more time to adjust their portfolios and business models.
Another supporting factor is the technology-inclusive orientation of the rules, which allows manufacturers to adopt the technology mix that best suits their fleets. The original proposal only allowed for electric vehicle technology, while the final rule includes hybrid electric vehicles, plug-in hybrid electric vehicles and cleaner gasoline vehicles.
If the new presidential administration does not overturn these final EPA rules, a significant acceleration in the adoption of battery-powered electric vehicles will still be needed after 2029.
At that point, potential laggards in meeting EPA targets will be under intense pressure to either spend billions of dollars buying carbon credits from other compliant automakers or reduce the number of internal combustion engine vehicles they can sell.
Transportation currently accounts for 29% of total U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, with light-duty vehicles being the largest source of emissions, accounting for 58% of all transportation sources, making the industry’s progress critical to achieving climate-related goals.
Against this backdrop, we view the final EPA standards as both a positive credit development for traditional OEMs and an important step in the automotive industry’s own net-zero transformation.
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