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Are US Vehicle-Mileage Standards Obsolete?

By Steve Goreham -- November 8, 2017

“… new mileage standards will raise vehicle prices and may force the adoption of electric cars. But there is no evidence that the regulations will have a measurable effect on global temperatures.”

“[US EPA] Administrator Scott Pruitt launched a review of the strict mileage regulations from the Obama Administration. It’s long past time for a roll-back of obsolete US vehicle mileage regulations.”

Regulations to reduce fuel consumption and to increase vehicle mileage were born during the oil shock of the 1970s. But within the last decade, the fracking revolution reestablished the United States as the world’s energy superpower.

Are vehicle mileage standards now obsolete?

In October 1973, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) declared an oil embargo, targeting the United States and other nations. Within six months, the world price of petroleum quadrupled, from $3 to $12 per barrel. Shortages and price controls in the US market produced rising prices, long gas lines, and a slowing US economy.

US crude oil production declined from a high of 9.6 million barrels of oil per day (bpd) in 1970 to eventually reach a low of 5 million bpd in 2008. US imports of foreign oil rose from 20 percent of petroleum products in 1970 to more than 40 percent in 1977. In response to the growing dependence on imports, Congress passed the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975 (EPCA), directing the US Department of Transportation (DOT) to establish mileage standards for cars and trucks to reduce dependence upon oil imports.

The DOT assigned the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) the responsibility of establishing US vehicle mileage standards. NHTSA established the first Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) Standards in 1978. CAFE standards for cars rose from 18 miles per gallon in 1978 to 27.5 mpg in 1991 and then remained unchanged through 2010. US imports of foreign oil climbed to 60 percent of petroleum product consumption by 2005. World oil prices rocketed to over $140 per barrel in June, 2008.

But then the world changed. American geologists and petroleum engineers discovered how to use hydraulic fracturing (fracking) and horizontal drilling to extract petroleum and natural gas from shale, a common low-permeability rock formation. US crude oil production almost doubled from 5 million bpd in 2008 to over 9 million bpd in 2015. US frackers forced world oil prices to under $50 per barrel in 2015. Industry experts now project US production of over 10 million bpd in 2018. America is once again the world’s leading producer of oil and natural gas.

Net imports fell from 60 percent of petroleum products supplied in 2005 to 22 percent this year and continue to fall. Canada has become our leading foreign supplier. Imports share of petroleum products is now lower than it was when Congress enacted the EPCA in 1975. While Congressional action and mileage standards failed to reduce dependence upon foreign oil during a 30-year period, the fracking revolution slashed our dependence in little more than a decade. The original reason for vehicle mileage standards, to reduce dependence upon foreign oil, is gone.

But federal regulations, once enacted, take on a life of their own. In May of 2009, President Obama announced a tightening of vehicle-mileage standards, not to reduce dependence upon oil imports, but instead to aim at “decreasing greenhouse gas pollution.” In 2012, EPA and NHTSA established CAFE standards for cars to achieve 163 grams of carbon dioxide emitted per mile by 2025, or the equivalent of 54.5 mpg. Fuel economy regulations were also established for medium- and heavy-duty trucks, the so-called GHG Phase 2 standards.

These new mileage standards will raise vehicle prices and may force the adoption of electric cars. But there is no evidence that the regulations will have a measurable effect on global temperatures. EPA and NHTSA claim a reduction of about 0.7 billion metric tons of CO2 emissions per year from 2017 to 2025, only 1.4 percent of annual world emissions. But since the oceans and biosphere naturally exhaust 20 times the amount of CO2 emissions from human industry into the atmosphere every year, the CO2 emissions savings from CAFE standards will be less than negligible.

This year, the EPA under Administrator Scott Pruitt launched a review of the strict mileage regulations from the Obama Administration. It’s long past time for a roll-back of obsolete US vehicle mileage regulations.

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Steve Goreham, a leading speaker on the environment, business, and public policy, is author of the energy primer Outside the Green Box: Rethinking Sustainable Development.   (New Lenox Books, 2017). He is also author of The Mad, Mad, Mad World of Climatism (New Lenox Books, 2012) and Climatism! Science, Common, Sense, and the 21st Century’s Hottest Topic (New Lenox Books, 2010). His full biography can be accessed here.

3 Comments


  1. Mark Krebs  

    CAFE standards also impose significant diseconomies on consumers that should be considered. For example, Ford went to plastic intake manifolds to save weight. These fail at a repair cost of over $1000 per incident. Assuming an average family even has that kind of money on hand (most people don’t even have $500 according to a recent Forbes article shown below), that kind of expense can easily wipe out any consumer savings attributable to higher vehicle “efficiency.”

    Like Federal appliance efficiency regulations, the CAFE system is morally bankrupt.

    Forbes article:
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/maggiemcgrath/2016/01/06/63-of-americans-dont-have-enough-savings-to-cover-a-500-emergency/#5022917a4e0d

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  2. Tom O  

    Rising costs of new gasoline cars and gasoline won’t force a lot of motorists into electric cars – they still like to be able to drive somewhere and back in a single day. Most of us will pay a little more for the gas and maintain our older cars because we still want the freedom of the highway, even if it isn’t as “free” as it was. Only when government mandates the destruction of older cars or offers another program like a “Cash for Clunkers” where ignorant people get rid of perfectly good cars for a few bucks, will the older cars be taken off the highway. People will be finally getting rid of their 20 year old cars, upgrading to a newer, 15 year old car before they will be “going electric” unless and until the government refuses to allow the older cars on the highway – something that isn’t unlikely.

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  3. joe r  

    on bad result of the standards. you may no longer but a 5k to 7 k full size van from any co. they are called 1/2ton and 3/4 ton vans. theirs a use for high volume but not heavy weight . but the way the Obama rules went in those vans were counted in with cars not trucks equipped with 6 cyl they were able in real life 16-18 mpg. but the new rules no moke full size vans 8500 gvw also called 1 ton. thru often get 10 to 12 loaded and most have v8 engines. but what that means to business is higher cost to buy, more gas or diesel. more expensive tires. and on many toll roads and especially bridges higher passages. and higher registration cost. and on the driver unnecessary harder ride since a light loaded truck rides harder. so now 1/3 of the buyers are stuck. the foreign made commercial small vans can only fill very small part of the of the lighter full size business needs. and the net result more gas and more pollution and more cost to business

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