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The Hogan administration is pausing the state鈥檚 participation in a multi-state alliance that requires new vehicles sold in Maryland to meet the same emissions standards as those sold in California, a state official said Monday.
The administration鈥檚 decision was revealed Monday morning at a meeting of the Air Quality Control Advisory Council, which advises the Maryland Department of the Environment on proposed air quality rules and regulations and evaluates legislation proposed by the General Assembly and state agencies.
Although the emissions standards weren鈥檛 on the agenda, an environmentalist asked an official of MDE during the online meeting whether the Hogan administration planned to follow California鈥檚 newly-adopted, more stringent emissions standards. The official, Chris Hoagland, director of Air and Radiation at MDE, said Gov. Larry Hogan (R) did not plan to sign an order adopting the so-called Advanced Clean Cars II regulation.
Lindsey Mendelson, the transportation policy specialist at the Maryland chapter of the Sierra Club who raised the question at the air quality council meeting, said she was 鈥渧ery disappointed鈥 by the administration鈥檚 decision.
鈥淚t鈥檚 low-hanging fruit,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 absolutely no reason that the governor shouldn鈥檛 adopt the law.鈥
Maryland has followed California鈥檚 emissions guidelines for new cars and light trucks since 2007 鈥斅燼n arrangement that began for 2011 model year cars and trucks. In all, 14 states have been using California regulations, rather than weaker federal rules, as a yardstick for vehicle emissions for several years.
But the original agreement is expiring, and states have been weighing whether to re-up for California鈥檚 new, tougher standards, which聽require vehicle manufacturers to sell an increasing percentage of new zero-emission passenger cars and light-duty trucks in model years 2026 through 2035. The current arrangement runs through the model 2025 year.
The regulation 鈥 which aligns with legislation passed by the Maryland General Assembly earlier this year 鈥 requires states to allow only new zero-emissions vehicles to be sold after 2035.
The Hogan administration had to decide by the end of this year whether to follow California鈥檚 new Advanced Clean Cars II regulation, which was adopted by California鈥檚 powerful in August.聽Delaware, Massachusetts, New York, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington state聽have already聽signed on.
With the Hogan administration opting out, Gov.-elect Wes Moore (D) will have to decide next year whether to bring the state back into the consortium. But even if he does, model year 2027 vehicles sold in the state will have weaker emissions standards than those sold in the states that agree to abide by the California model, because auto manufacturers require a two-year notice of a state鈥檚 emissions rules. States that follow the California plan will be required to ensure that at least 43% of the new cars and light-duty trucks sold in model year 2027 are zero emissions or plugged-in hybrids.
The Hogan administration offered no public explanation for why the state won鈥檛 follow California鈥檚 more stringent standards. The decision contradicts a recommendation from the Maryland Climate Change Commission, which Hogan鈥檚 Environment secretary, Horacio Tablada, co-chairs.
Earlier this fall, House Environment and Transportation Committee Chair Kumar Barve (D-Montgomery), along with the chair of that panel鈥檚 Motor Vehicle and Transportation subcommittee, Del. David Fraser-Hidalgo (D-Montgomery), and Del. Marc Korman (D-Montgomery), chair of the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation and the Environment, , calling the adoption of the Advanced Clean Cars II regulation 鈥渙ur best opportunity to date to significantly mitigate the nation鈥檚 leading source of dangerous air and climate pollutants and reduce the State鈥檚 reliance on costly, volatile fossil fuels.鈥
鈥淭he ACC II rule in Maryland will further incentivize car manufacturers to accelerate production of pollution-free cars and, ultimately, get more of them into frontline communities,鈥 the lawmakers wrote. 鈥淭his will be an important step in reducing the costly health impacts of noxious emissions.鈥
Peter Kitzmiller, president of the Maryland Auto Dealers Association, said Monday that auto manufacturers and dealers are already preparing for the transition to zero-emissions vehicles, regardless of the state鈥檚 emissions rules for new cars and light trucks. Currently, about 3.5% of the vehicles on the road in Maryland emit zero emissions, he said.
鈥淭he manufactures are spending tens of billions of dollars and the dealers are spending millions of dollars in infrastructure to get ready for this,鈥 Kitzmiller said. 鈥淭his is obviously the way the market is going to go. Are we going to get there as quickly as some of the regulations require us to? I don鈥檛 know.鈥
This summer, when California announced its latest stringent regulations for emissions of new vehicles, several auto manufacturers applauded them, saying they provided certainty and stability for the industry. A Ford Motor Company executive called it 鈥渁 landmark standard,鈥 and reiterated the company鈥檚 commitment to building zero-emissions vehicles.
The Hogan administration鈥檚 plan not to adopt the new California regulation is reminiscent of to decline to formally join the Transportation and Climate Initiative (TCI), a collaborative effort of mid-Atlantic and Northeastern states to set up a carbon 鈥渃ap-and-invest鈥 model to transportation emissions 鈥 even though Maryland officials had been part of the initial planning for the regional alliance.
Moore, who takes office on Jan. 18, has promised a robust climate agenda, but has offered few specifics. His transition team鈥檚 climate policy committee is on Tuesday evening. Leaders of the聽Air Quality Control Advisory Council have promised to put the California emissions regulations on the agenda for its next meeting in March.