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Americans Deserve Vehicles That Are Both Safe and Clean
Detroit opposes CAFE standards, claiming that they cannot make a safe, clean SUV. Contrary
to the auto industry's arguments, CAFE standards don't dictate automobile size or safety.
Design, not weight, is the key to both safety and fuel economy. Engineering and safety
features like airbags and crush-resistant roofs can ensure that vehicles absorb crash
forces so occupants don't. Crash-test results show that automakers are making safe and
unsafe cars of all sizes. In a standard head-on crash test into a wall, occupants of a
1997 Ford Expedition faced greater risk of injury or death than occupants of a 1997 Saturn
subcompact. This is because the Saturn has crashworthiness designed into it and the
Expedition does not.
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| "Ford Motor Company, which depends on
sport utility vehicles for much of its profit... sad that the vehicles contribute more
than cars to global warming, emitted more smog-causing pollution and endangered other
motorists."
New York Times, May 12, 2000
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The same industry claimed the original CAFE law was a threat to highway safety,
battled automotive safety improvements from seatbelts to airbags and continues to fight a
rollover standard. The fact is that since 1975 CAFE standards doubled fuel economy and the
rate of highway fatalities fell by 50 percent.
The SUV Safety Story: Rollovers and Dangers to Others on the Road
Here's what the New York Times said about SUV safety (July 15, 1999): "Because it
is taller, heavier and more rigid, an SUV or a pickup is more than twice as likely as a
car to kill the driver of the other vehicle in a collision. Yet partly because these
so-called light trucks roll over so often, their occupants have roughly the same chance as
car occupants of dying in a crash."
SUVs give a false impression of safety. With their height and comparatively narrow
tire-track width, SUVs handle and maneuver much less effectively than cars. Emergency
swerves to avoid a crash can themselves lead to rollover accidents in SUVs, which are four
times more likely to roll over in an accident. Rollovers account for 62 percent of SUV
deaths but only 22 percent in cars. Yet automakers continue to fight new standards that
would protect occupants in rollover accidents.
Because SUVs are built on high, stiff frames, their bumpers ride above the
occupant-protecting frame of cars. When an SUV and a car collide, this height difference,
combined with the stiff battering-ram frame and greater mass, create a lethal weapon.
According to a government study, in 1996 "at least 2,000 car occupants would not
have been killed, had their cars collided with other cars instead of trucks of the same
weight." And SUVs are also more deadly to pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists
than cars, in part because existing braking standards for SUVs are weaker than for cars.
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