December 17th, 2024

Trump to block the government and military from buying EVs

The Trump administration plans to eliminate EV subsidies, roll back fuel efficiency standards, impose tariffs on battery materials, abolish the clean vehicle tax credit, and halt zero-emission vehicle purchases.

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Trump to block the government and military from buying EVs

The incoming Trump administration plans to implement significant measures against electric vehicles (EVs), which are more extensive than previously anticipated. Transition team documents indicate intentions to eliminate EV subsidies, retract federal funding for EV charging infrastructure, block imports of EV batteries citing national security, and prevent federal and military purchases of EVs. The administration aims to roll back fuel efficiency standards to 2019 levels, allowing a 25% increase in emissions. This shift comes as the Biden administration had set a goal for 50% of new vehicles to be electrified by 2032. The Trump administration is also expected to impose global tariffs on battery materials, raising EV costs, and abolish the $7,500 clean vehicle tax credit. Additionally, it plans to reclaim unspent funds from the $7.5 billion allocated for charging infrastructure and eliminate environmental reviews for charging station projects. The federal government will likely revert to purchasing more polluting vehicles, ending the requirement for zero-emission light vehicles by 2027 and halting electric military vehicle programs. These actions signal a substantial pivot away from clean vehicle initiatives and towards supporting traditional gas-powered vehicles.

- The Trump administration plans to eliminate EV subsidies and funding for charging infrastructure.

- Fuel efficiency standards will be rolled back, increasing allowable emissions by 25%.

- Global tariffs on battery materials are expected to raise EV costs significantly.

- The $7,500 clean vehicle tax credit will be abolished.

- The federal government will no longer be required to purchase zero-emission vehicles.

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By @jfengel - 4 months
This sounds like nothing more than pwning the libs, so I read the underlying article for the ostensible reason. Which turns out to be "too much China in the supply chain", as if somehow ICE cars were somehow free of Chinese parts and resources.

In other words, yeah, it's pwning the libs. Musk is perfectly happy since the government was mostly buying non-Tesla electric vehicles (like the new postal delivery trucks).