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Procedural Maze Continues for Vehicle Efficiency Regulation

Update: EPA and NHTSA have issued the Supplemental Notice of Intent.

The regulatory process is often complex: agencies must balance opportunities for public comment, complex scientific information, and economic analysis, all while trying to craft a program that fulfills a legal mandate. But when it comes to crafting proposals for vehicle fuel economy and greenhouse gas standards, the process has become an administrative nightmare.

In May, President Obama announced plans for the EPA and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) to propose fuel economy standards for 2017-2025. Last week, EPA and NHTSA sent a supplemental notice of intent to propose fuel economy standards to OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) for review. OIRA has 90 days to review the document, but it is expected to be released  in the coming weeks.

The document is the third official statement of policy to come from the Obama administration in advance of a proposed rule for light duty (cars, minivans, SUVs, pickup trucks) vehicle efficiency standards expected in September 2011. EPA says the document, not publicly available, promises to make incremental steps toward proposing standards, including “narrowing the range of potential stringencies” for the upcoming proposed regulation. 

EPA and NHTSA’s supplemental notice of intent is expected to answer the question of what the expected pace of improvements will be. The agencies previously requested comments on proposed rates of improvement of 3, 4, 5 and 6 percent per year reductions in greenhouse gas emissions (which roughly correspond to commensurate increases in fuel economy). But the answer to that question is buried in a complicated process that is heavily dependent on economic analysis.

The Bush administration fundamentally restructured the fuel economy program, first for light trucks (pickup trucks and SUVs), and, in amendments to the fuel economy law enacted under the Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007, for passenger cars as well. Instead of setting a standard based on the old criteria of what was technologically feasible and economically practicable, the Bush administration made fuel economy standards based on a complex, manufacturer-specific mathematical model.

Setting the level of vehicle efficiency standards then became intensely dependent on specific inputs to the model. The expected price of gasoline, the social cost of carbon, the predicted costs of vehicle technology, and market forecasts of which specific vehicles consumers would purchase became the determinants of vehicle efficiency standards. 

The model is based on vehicle-specific information supplied by manufacturers and outside sources. Inputs include details not just about each type of vehicle, but each specific configuration – the combination of engine and transmission, even which lubricants are used. EPA and NHTSA determine what is technologically feasible by applying technological changes to a hypothetical “reference fleet” and stopping when the costs have just balanced the benefits.

The narrowed range of stringencies that the agencies will announce in the supplemental notice will rely on how the agencies, under the guidance of OIRA, value the costs and benefits. 

One of the most contentious of the benefit calculations hinges on the social cost of carbon. The Obama administration convened an interagency working group, which has endorsed a "central" estimate of $21 per ton, which falls far short of capturing the full range of likely (quantifiable) costs associated with damage from climate change. (See Frank Ackerman and Elizabeth Stanton’s report on the social cost of carbon). The disadvantage of the working group approach is that the agencies are effectively tied to a single, government-wide value. Since the stringency of standards is sensitive to the social cost of carbon, EPA may propose efficiency standards lower than it would otherwise in light of the potential harm associated with climate change.

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Lena Pons | December 1, 2010

Procedural Maze Continues for Vehicle Efficiency Regulation

Update: EPA and NHTSA have issued the Supplemental Notice of Intent. The regulatory process is often complex: agencies must balance opportunities for public comment, complex scientific information, and economic analysis, all while trying to craft a program that fulfills a legal mandate. But when it comes to crafting proposals for vehicle fuel economy and greenhouse gas […]

Dan Rohlf | November 30, 2010

FWS’ Critical Habitat Area Designation for Polar Bears is Good News, but How Much Difference Will it Make?

First the good news: the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) last week designated a huge expanse of barrier islands, denning areas, and sea ice in the Arctic as “critical habitat” for polar bears under the federal Endangered Species Act. The largest such protected area in the ESA’s history, the new critical habitat covers an […]

Yee Huang | November 30, 2010

Most Chesapeake Bay Watershed States Submit Cleanup Plans; A First Look at Virginia’s

Yesterday was the deadline for Bay states and the District of Columbia to submit their final Phase I Watershed Implementation Plans (WIP). These WIPs are roadmaps that describe how Bay jurisdictions will meet their pollutant reduction obligations under the Bay TMDL. Delaware, the District of Columbia, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia submitted their plans by the deadline, […]

Holly Doremus | November 24, 2010

CEQ Finalizes Guidance for Categorical Exclusions

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. The White House Council on Environmental Quality has issued the first of three expected final guidance documents for federal agencies implementing the National Environmental Policy Act. This one, which covers the use of categorical exclusions, is an excellent start. NEPA is the “look before you leap” environmental law. It requires that […]

Ben Somberg | November 19, 2010

Coal Ash Comments Submitted: Get Serious, Please

“In order for CBA cost benefit analysis to be workable, regulators need to have a relatively restricted range of possibilities.” That’s what OIRA Administrator Cass Sunstein wrote in a 2007 book. So how about from $82 billion to negative $251 billion, a third of a trillion dollars – is that a relatively restricted range? Those […]

Ben Somberg | November 19, 2010

Jacob Lew Confirmed as Director of OMB

Senator Mary Landrieu released her hold on the nomination of Jacob Lew for Director of the Office of Management and Budget, and the Senate confirmed Lew by voice vote Thursday evening. Back when Lew had his confirmation hearings, CPR President Rena Steinzor wrote here about the challenges Lew will face on the regulatory front (“OMB […]

Victor Flatt | November 17, 2010

Welcome Clarity and Few Surprises in EPA’s Guidance on Greenhouse Gas Permitting

Last week the EPA released its “PSD and Title V Permitting Guidance For Greenhouse Gases.” This Guidance was designed to give the states direction in how to implement permitting requirements for new sources for other criteria pollutants that also produce greenhouse gases on January 2, 2011, and new sources of greenhouse gases following in May, 2011, […]

Rena Steinzor | November 17, 2010

War on Regulation Coming to the States? Why IPI’s Plan For Centralized Regulatory Review Isn’t What We Need

One of the most powerful sleights of hand achieved by Republicans during the last election cycle was their renewed declaration of war on regulation. It’s no secret which of their interest groups are most passionate about this aspect of their agenda. Tuesday’s LATimes previewed a plan by the Chamber of Commerce, to be announced today, to further […]

Ben Somberg | November 15, 2010

EPA Moves Forward With Numeric Nutrient Criteria for Florida Waters; Plan Will Begin in 15 Months

The EPA announced this morning that it has finalized numeric nutrient criteria for Florida waters — specific limits on the amounts of nutrient pollutants allowed in the state’s water bodies. These criteria will in turn limit discharges by point and non-point sources. Currently, nutrient limits are set only by “narrative” water quality standards — which […]