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Technology-Forcing Automobile Emissions Provisions of the 1970 Clean Air Act: ... Regulations led to putting electronic controls on cars. This produced a platform for ...
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Slide 1:Technology-Forcing Automobile Emissions Provisions of the 1970 Clean Air Act: Forcing Invention or Innovation? David Gerard & Lester Lave
Center for the Study & Improvement of Regulation
Carnegie Mellon University
November 2002
Slide 2:2 1970 Clean Air Act Amendments mandates 90% reductions in mobile source emissions
sets short time horizons -- 1975 for HC, CO; 1976 for NOx
establishes $10,000 per car penalty for non-compliance
limits EPAs discretion to delay implementation
Sharp contrast to provisions for stationary sources
Slide 3:3 Two Marquee Technologies Ford, GM install catalytic converters on 1975 MY vehicles; devices on most US vehicles by 1977.
Widespread introduction of three-way catalysts in 1981
? US producers do not meet standards set in 1970 statute until 1993
Slide 4:4 Major Control Technologies of New Vehicles Sold in US
Slide 5:5 Federal Emissions Standards
Slide 6:6 Questions 1. How does the technology-forcing regulatory process work?
Who are the stakeholders / participants?
What are their incentives?
What did they do throughout the process?
2. What is the relationship between regulations and the development of new emissions control technologies?
Regulations ? Technological Advance
Slide 7:7 Answers -- Overview of Talk 1. Brief Theoretical Primer
2. We draw on information from economics, history, legal scholarship, court cases, and stakeholder interviews to look at three periods:
Historical antecedents, Why Technology-Forcing Regulations?
1971-1975, catalytic converter
1975-1981, three-way catalysts
3. Lessons, Limitations, Conclusions
Slide 8:8 Regulatory Instrument Choice Technology Standard
low monitoring costs, relatively high degree of certainty of outcomes Performance Standard
flexibility, lower costs, greater incentive to innovate
Slide 9:9 Technology-Forcing Literature Firms generally have superior information
incentive to disguise, downplay ability to innovate
incentive to under-invest in R&D
Regulator commitment and credibility is central to motivating recalcitrant industry to do R&D.
?Models generally predict that firms will either meet standard, or miss by a lot. (Kleit, 1992; Yao 1988).
?Treat industry as single player (compare with Hackett, 1995; Puller, 2002).
Slide 10:10 Regulations ? Technological Advancein oligopoly setting Generalized Model of R&D Incentives (Puller, 2002)
1. Reduce compliance costs (+) (M) (exo)
2. Operationalize Cost Advantage (+)
(raise rivals costs)
___________
3. R&D costs (-) (M) (exo)
4. Spillovers, Appropriability (-) (exo)
5. Ratcheting, Regulator Credibility (-) (M)
Slide 11:11 R&D Investment Link often Deterministic, but TF Fraught with Uncertainty Cost
Technological breakthroughs (even if firms make good faith efforts)
Reliability
Unintended consequences
Lock-in of inferior technology
?all present challenges for political feasibility, and administrative actions
Slide 12:12 Answers -- Overview of Talk 1. Brief Theoretical Primer
2. We draw on information from economics, history, legal scholarship, court cases, and stakeholder interviews to look at three periods:
Historical antecedents, Why Technology-Forcing Regulations?
1971-1975, catalytic converter
1975-1981, three-way catalysts
3. Lessons, Limitations, Conclusions
Slide 13:13 Historical Antecedents to Clean Air Act Post WWII, US auto manufacturers a comfortable, untouchable oligopoly.
1961 California mandates PCV valve
1965 Unsafe at Any Speed; federalization of automobile emissions regulations (MVPCA)
1966 Safety Legislation (administrative discretion)
1967 Air Quality Act HEW follows CARBs lead in setting emission standards.
1969 Dept of Justice sues Big 3 (+1) for conspiring to suppress emissions control technologies. Stands until 1981.
1970 Nixon, Muskie back and forth leads to technology-forcing aspects of Clean Air Act Amendments measure
Slide 14:14 1970 Clean Air Act Amendments 1. EPA must set new Federal Test Procedure
2. HC, CO standards effectively changed in 1972, and NOx standards set to go into effect in 1973.
3. Mandates 90% reductions in mobile source emissions
HC 4.1 ? 0.41 by 1975 MY
CO 34 ? 3.4 by 1975 MY
NOx uncontrolled ? 0.41 by 1976
4. $10,000 per car penalty for non-compliance
5. EPA has discretion to delay standards once.
Slide 15:15 Development and Diffusion of the Catalytic Converter EPA
enormous benefits at modest costs
equips its own vehicles and satisfies 50K standard Industry
Agrees in principle, but wants longer time horizon
GM most adamant, as it has best shot at meeting standard at low cost
Slide 16:16 Timetable of First Delay
Slide 17:17 Effects of Catalytic Converter Push EPA sets stringent interim standards, basically forcing GM and Ford to put catalytic converters on vehicles
HC 4.1 ? 1.5 (0.41)
CO 34 ? 15 (3.4)
Manufacturers no longer have to detune vehilces to meet standards.
Catalytic converters reliable and durable (when not poisoned by leaded gasoline).
Chrysler basically didnt do anything, and does not put catalytic converter on its 1975 MY vehicles. Emissions of HC 38% and CO 60% higher than Ford, GM vehicles
Slide 18:18 Recapitulation Ambitious goal, short time horizon
EPA had clear idea of what it wanted to do: force development and installation of a fairly mature technology
Industry did not have big information advantage
EPA shows extra-ordinary determination, but winks at Chrysler
rapid diffusion of catalytic converters and steep reductions in HC, CO emissions, but still not that close to meeting standards
Slide 19:19 Complicating Factors Economic Malaise of 1970s
Oil Embargo
Questions about whether emissions controls affect fuel economy. GM splits with Ford, Chrysler
Congressional delay from 1976 to 1977
EPA technical staff jumps ahead of the curve on fuel economy
Sulfate question
EPA delays deadline from 1977 to 1978
industry split
EPA split
Slide 20:20 1977 Clean Air Act Amendments Industry cannot comply with 1978 standards, but produces vehicles anyway
EPA cannot delay standards
Congress forced to delay standards or shut down industry, chooses to delay standards to 1981 for NOx.
Slide 21:21 Hard NOx July 20, 1973 EPA delay of NOx standard not particularly controversial -- neither EPA nor industry has a good plan for meeting standard (plus EGR was not working particularly well)
1975 EPA and NAS suspect that industry is lax in its research efforts
1981 Three-way catalysts put on most US vehilces. Major problems with technology
Slide 22:22 What Happened? Possible Explanations for Problems with Meeting Standards Too many disruptions
Industry diligently pursued new technologies, but simply couldnt get enabling technologies in place
For whatever reasons industry scaled back its R&D efforts.
EPA lacked credibility after giving Chrysler a free ride.
EPA did not have a clear idea of whether NOx controls were feasible
Informational chasm between industry and EPA
Forcing invention inherently more uncertain
Slide 23:23 Technological Advance through 1970s and 80s
Fuel Economy Improvements
Beefed up horsepower
Incremental improvements in emissions performance
Competing Explanations
Regulations led to putting electronic controls on cars. This produced a platform for performance improvements.
Industry saw dramatic entry and competition, which forced firms to redouble their efforts to improve their products.
Slide 24:24 HC Emissions of 1974-1990 Vehicles
Slide 25:25 To Be Continued California Regulations
1989 ZEV mandate
2002 CO2-reductions mandate
Slide 26:26 Lessons Consistent with Theoretical Predictions
technology forcing works best when asymmetry of information is limited and regulators are committed and can credibly enforce standards
Consistency with conventional wisdom about technology standards versus performance standards less clear
Difficult to force technological leaps (to say nothing of high fixed costs of network effects)
Process especially vulnerable to unforeseen complications
Slide 27:27 Limitations Controlling for External Factors
Says nothing about whether technology-forcing regulations pass a cost-benefit test
does not endorse technology-forcing as the best approach
stiff gas tax
aggressive I/M program, vehicle scrappage
driving restrictions