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Sunday, April 3, 2022

Not An April Fool's Day Joke: Biden Administration Says New Vehicles Must Average An Incredible 49 Miles per Gallon by 2026

 NOTE:
Some sources are incorrectly reporting 40mpg in 2026, but the EPA is saying 49mpg on page 1 of their 1,230 page pdf file. I stopped reading after page 1. The average mpg for the 2021 model year is about 36mpg. The most fuel efficient cars in 2021 are electric and hybrids. The highest ICE is 43mpg for highway driving.

Mitsubishi Mirage: 36/43/39 
        city / highway / combined mpg. 
Hyundai Elantra: 33/43/37 mpg. 
Hyundai Accent & Kia Rio: 33/41/36 mpg. ...
Hyundai Ioniq: 58/60/59 mpg. 
Toyota Prius: 58/53/56 mpg. ...
Toyota Prius Prime: 133 mpg-equivalent. 
Hyundai Ioniq Plug-In Hybrid: 119 mpg-e.
Ye Editor

Source:

"The Biden administration announced on April 1 it is raising requirements for fuel efficiency, reversing a rollback by the Trump administration.

New vehicles sold in the United States will have to travel an average of at least 49 miles per gallon of gasoline in 2026 under the new federal rules.

The requirement would have been at 32 mpg if going by rules under the Trump administration.


Specifically, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said fuel efficiency requirements will increase by 8 percent annually for 2024 and 2025 model years, and 10 percent annually for model year 2026.

The Trump administration had in March 2020 rolled back fuel efficiency requirements to 1.5 percent annual increases through 2026.

The Obama administration had required 5 percent annual increases.

The new regulation (pdf) marks a slightly bigger increase than the proposal outlined in August 2021 by the NHTSA in a joint rule-making process with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), as part of efforts to improve gas mileage and reduce tailpipe pollution.

      The pdf file is 1,230 pages !
https://www.nhtsa.gov/sites/nhtsa.gov/files/2022-04/Final-Rule-Preamble_CAFE-MY-2024-2026.pdf

The EPA had announced similar rules in December 2021.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said the new rule “means that American families will be able to drive further before they have to fill up, saving hundreds of dollars per year.”

NHTSA estimates that under the rule, consumers could save $1,387 in fuel costs over the life of a vehicle. but the average cost of a new vehicle would also increase by almost that much—$1,087."

Author Mimi Nguyen Ly is a reporter based in Australia covering world news with a focus on U.S. news. Contact Mimi at mimi.nl@epochtimes.com