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SUVs Increase Our Oil Addiction, Threaten Our Wilderness and Coasts
A hidden cost of SUVs is the price we pay with our natural resources. To
keep these gas guzzlers running, oil companies seek to drill in new areasincluding
some of our nation's most sensitive wilderness habitats. As the number of gas guzzlers on
the road grows, so does the pressure to drill in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife
Refugeone of the last remaining pristine ecosystems. Fragile coastlines in
California and Florida, and lands surrounding Yellowstone National Park are also targets
for drilling.
The Exxon Valdez disaster serves as a powerful reminder that transporting
oil also threatens our environment. Smaller spills and leaks occur daily, putting
waterways and wildlife at risk.
Worsening our Energy Security
Every day America consumes 18 million barrels of oil. We import nearly half of this
oil (the same amount guzzled by cars and light trucks) from politically volatile regions.
Our oil imports add $50 billion to the U.S. trade deficit annually. Due to the increasing
number of gas-guzzling vehicles, America is more dependent on foreign oil now than we were
at the height of the 1973 energy crisis. Congress passed the Corporate Average Fuel
Economy (CAFE) standards in 1975 to reduce our dangerous oil dependence. This doubled the
fuel economy of America's vehicle fleet, saving 3 million barrels of oil per day. However,
the oil savings from CAFE standards are being eroded by people driving farther and the
rising proportion of inefficient SUVs and other light trucks. In fact, the average fuel
economy of new vehicles has sunk to the lowest level since 1980. Raising the CAFE standard
for light trucks to equal that of cars (27.5 mpg) would save 1 million barrels of oil per
day. We can do even better. Raising the average for cars to 45 mpg and light trucks to 34
mpg would save 3 million barrels of oil per day.
Lowest Fleet Fuel Economy
Average Since 1980
The fuel economy average for both cars and trucks is at its lowest pint since 1980. (US
EPA Light-Duty Automotive Tecnology and Fuel Economy Trends Through 1999, Spet. 1999) |
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Available technology and higher mileage standards could make the popular Ford
Explorer a 34.1 mpg vehicle, rather than a 19.3 mpg guzzler, without compromising
performance or safety. This "improved" Explorer could emit 43 percent less
global-warming pollution and 76 percent less smog-forming pollution and cost only $935
more. Consumers would save several times this at the gas pump over the life of the
vehicle.
Industry Foot-Dragging and Excuses
History shows that automakers won't improve the environmental performance of their
products unless they are required to put technology to work. Raising CAFE standards is the
key to cleaning up SUVs and other light trucks.
In 1974, a Ford official testified before Congress that CAFE standards would
"result in a Ford product line consisting of either all sub-Pinto-sized vehicles or
some mix of vehicles ranging from a sub-sub-compact to perhaps a Maverick." Today,
automakers use similar arguments against improving CAFE standards for SUVs. The claim
wasn't true then; it isn't true today. Eighty-six percent of the fuel-economy improvements
for cars have resulted from improved technologies such as more efficient engines and
transmissions and better aerodynamics. In July 2000, Ford promised to use technology
that will improve its SUVs' fuel economy by 25 percent over five years. General Motors
pledged to exceed Ford's light-truck fuel economy. Keeping these promises will begin the
process of cleaning up SUVs.
But Detroit continues to fight higher CAFE standards for light trucks and cars,
which would guarantee these and other improvements. The auto industry has taken its fight
to Congress, getting its friends to fight legislation that would increase fuel economy.
Beginning in 1995, Congress froze CAFE standards at levels set decades ago.
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