Mississippi lawmakers urge US President Biden to end transition to EVs
In Washington D.C., U.S. Senators Roger Wicker (R-Miss.), Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) and U.S. Representatives Trent Kelly (R-Miss.), Michael Guest (R-Miss.), and Mike Ezell (R-Miss.) have signed a bicameral letter urging President Biden to withdraw an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposed rule that would require 67 percent of new light-duty vehicles and 46% of medium-duty vehicles to be electric by 2032. The Mississippi lawmakers are among 140 members of Congress who signed the letter to President Biden and White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Shalanda Young that argues the EPA rule, titled “Multi-Pollutant Emissions Standards for Model Years 2027 and Later Light-Duty and Medium-Duty Vehicles,” amounts to a de facto mandate for EVs by forcing the phase out of the internal combustion engine vehicle. In January, the EPA submitted the rule to OMB for review and approval. The lawmakers argue that the EPA rule should be rejected because it “is contradictory to all conventional predictions about where the automobile industry is headed in the coming years, including this Administration’s own Department of Energy.” “As reported in the U.S. Energy Information Administration’s Annual Energy Outlook in 2021, 4 of 5 new vehicles will still run on liquid fuels in 2050, making this rule not just absurd to the average citizen, but to your own agencies as well. In fact, recent reporting from sources inside your Administration indicates that EPA now intends to ease the rule’s requirements through 2030 to give automakers more time to comply. This again shows that even your own agencies know this mandate is absurd and unrealistic, and threatens to harm both industry and consumers,” the lawmakers wrote. “The EPA’s proposed rule is burdensome and inconsistent with the reality of the industry and needs to be rejected for the good of American families and businesses,” the lawmakers concluded.