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Virtually all transport energy comes from petroleum. In the US, 76% of US transport energy is used by highway ... Force the auto industry to develop most efficient vehicles and ...
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Slide 1:The case for a global greenhouse gas standard for light-duty vehicles based on the California model Russell Long, Ph.D.
Bluewater Network
Founder, Executive Director
Slide 2:
Slide 5:Transportation trends Virtually all transport energy comes from petroleum
In the US, 76% of US transport energy is used by highway vehicles, of which 60% is from cars and light trucks (almost half of total)
Slide 6:CO2 from a Model T driven in 1909 is still in the atmosphere, warming our planet
Slide 7:Average US fuel mileage from new light duty vehicles in 2003 has fallen 6% in the past 15 years
US transportation energy consumption is increasing by 1.8% annually, faster than any other category, much of this due to passenger vehicles
Transportation Trends
Slide 8:Someone Ought to Pass a Law Oil, Big Auto blocking US efforts to increase federal fuel mileage standards
November 2000, Bluewater Network conceives of and sponsors AB 1493: Californias Climate-Friendly Car Law
Goal: regulate greenhouse gases just like other pollutants
Slide 9:Californias Climate-Friendly Car Law First law specifically targeting reductions of greenhouse gases from passenger vehicles; nearly 40% of state GHG inventory
Strong mandate; requires maximum feasible cost-effective reduction of greenhouse gases from new passenger vehicles.
Slide 10:The Air Resources Board:a history of firsts Required smog controls such as catalytic converters on vehicles
Created low-emissions/zero emissions vehicle mandate that led to low-smog vehicles, alt-fueled vehicles, electric cars, and hybrids
Result: California cars in 2003 produce 99% less smog than in 1970
Slide 11:Obstacles Round One Auto industry/oil industry reportedly spent over $5 million on deceptive ad campaign
Radio
Television
Print
Convinced many citizens that the new law would raise the price of fuel and vehicles
Thousands of angry phone calls, letters, and emails poured into State Capitol opposing bill
Slide 13:Californias Climate-Friendly Car Law Legislation prohibits
speed limit reductions
driving or trip limitations
ban on SUV sales
land-use requirements
new auto or fuel taxes
Slide 14:The Road to Victory Supporters include: National political and entertainment figures: Senators McCain and Kerry, Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, Robert Redford, Barbra Streisand
Unions and Associations (Teachers, Firefighters, Nurses, Service Workers, Fishers, etc.)
Business leaders and industry (Ski industry, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs)
Slide 15:The Road to Victory Supporters include: Air and Water Quality Agencies
Churches and Religious Leaders
Public Health and Environmental Organizations
Farmers
Local Governments
Major Newspapers
Slide 17:Nuts and Bolts of the Regulation Affects new vehicles, starting with model year 2009
The state has until December 31, 2004 to develop actual regulatory language
Potential for absolute cap on emissions from all new passenger vehicles in state
Potential for ramping up alternative fuels and alternative fueled vehicles
Slide 18:Options under consideration
Change catalyst or refrigerant: 2%
Eliminate smog-forming pollution & particulate matter: 3%
Increase Efficiency: 25-60%
Change fuels: < 100%
Slide 19:Efficiency is a No-Brainer Todays Toyota Prius cuts greenhouse gas emissions almost in half compared to Toyota Camry, or a quarter that of a large SUV
Slide 20:Hydrogen from US grid energy (w/ fuel cell): none
Corn ethanol (E85 flex fuel vehicle): 20%
Compressed natural gas (CNG vehicles): 20%
2004 gasoline hybrid: 25-35%
Hydrogen from natural gas (fuel cell): 30-50%
Natural gas electricity (EV): 38%
Idealized hybrid incl. mass reduction: 60%
Biodiesel: 78%
Renewable hydrogen: <100%
Biogas: <100%
Cellulosic ethanol: <100%
Slide 21:Fossil Hydrogen Reality Check Economic:
Barring regulatory controls, the free market will dictate that the lowest cost fuel inputs will be used to make hydrogen, e.g. coal
Excessive barriers to development of hydrogen vehicles/infrastructure, especially developing nations
Slide 22:Fossil Hydrogen Reality Check Technologic: Carbon storage for hydrogen produced from coal or natural gas steam reformation still unproven:
Permanent sequestration may be a fantasy. Déjŕ vu - parallels to nuclear waste storage
Slide 23:Renewable Hydrogen Need to set minimum renewable hydrogen content requirements
Expensive on gas-equivalent basis, but price expected to fall dramatically in near-term
As costs decline, percentage of renewable hydrogen to be increased
Slide 24:CA Climate-Friendly Car LawRound Two
Slide 25:The Need for a Global Fuel Mileage (or Vehicular GHG) Standard Growth projected from 600 million passenger vehicles in 2003 to 1 billion before 2020
China now #2 in auto manufacturing
US transportation energy consumption increasing at 1.8% annual rate
The EU projects dramatic increases
By 2020, EU transport oil consumption is projected to grow 34% above 1990 levels
Slide 26:The Need for a Global Fuel Mileage (or Vehicular GHG) Standard Technologically viable with high efficiency technologies and lower GHG fuels
Politically viable
Increase national energy security plans
Decrease air and water pollution
Reduce capital outflows from oil importing nations
Force Big 3 to develop low GHG vehicles worldwide, undermining their arguments to Congress that they cannot build the same vehicles for the US
Slide 28:Bluewater Network Bluewater Network promotes critical policy changes in government and industry to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and eradicate other root causes of air and water pollution, global warming, and habitat destruction.
311 California Street, Ste 510
San Francisco, CA 94104
415-544-0790
www.bluewaternetwork.org