Rules to boost fuel economy for vehicles will do more good than harm, new study shows

From Eurekalert

 

Public Release: 6-Dec-2018

Findings by USC and other universities contradict claims by the Trump administration, which aims to roll back fuel economy standards

University of Southern California

Scholars from USC and other leading universities conclude that rules on the books to increase fuel economy for passenger vehicles will do more good than harm, contradicting claims by the Trump administration as it seeks to roll back fuel economy standards.

In a research paper that scrutinizes the cost-benefit methods used by federal officials to justify rolling back the regulations, the researchers conclude the government analysis is flawed and that it departs from accepted protocols. They found the analysis overlooked 6 million used cars, wiping out benefits estimated at least $112 billion.

The research findings, which are reported in Science today and will be presented to automakers and policymakers at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in Paris this week, are significant because they reflect best practices identified by leading, independent economists and engineers. The findings are also consistent with previous assessments showing that benefits for fuel-efficient vehicles outweigh costs. And the benefits accrue as blue skies, better health and fewer greenhouse gases (GHGs) contributing to global warming.

Antonio Bento, a professor of public policy and economics at the USC Price School of Public Policy and director of the nascent USC Center for Sustainability Solutions, said the study represents a “rapid assessment policy response” to the controversial regulatory proposal, which is undergoing federal rulemaking.

“It appears federal officials cherry-picked data to support a predetermined conclusion that the clean-car standards will lead to too many highway deaths,” said Bento, the study’s lead author. “We do not support that conclusion and the data does not support that conclusion.”

The Trump administration’s attempt to freeze fuel-economy standards for cars and light-duty trucks has sparked conflict with California and other states. Critics say the regulatory freeze is difficult to justify on economic, legal or environmental grounds.

But the new study goes a step further, suggesting the shortcomings in the government’s economic analysis are so egregious they seem like a deliberate attempt to manipulate statistics and mislead people.

Ironically, Bento occupies a special position in the controversy: He is the economist most often cited in the documents the EPA used to make its case for the regulatory relaxation. He is among a group of interdisciplinary scholars from leading universities who participated in the study, including experts from USC, Carnegie Mellon, Yale, the University of California and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, among others.

In 2007, Congress adopted laws to require corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) to increase to 35 mpg by 2020. The CAFE standards govern fuel economy across the U.S. fleet of passenger cars and light trucks. The U.S. EPA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) set fuel economy gains between 27 mpg and 55 mpg between 2012 and 2025. A midterm review conducted in 2016 affirmed the benefits exceeded the costs and the measures would be technologically feasible.

But this year under the Trump administration, the federal agencies reversed course, proposing rules to freeze CAFE standards at 2021 levels through 2025. Federal officials argue that forcing automakers to achieve an average of 54 mpg in seven years would lead to cars that are too expensive, thus forcing people to keep too many old vehicles that are less safe.

The federal government also seeks to revoke California’s long-standing authority to set its own, more stringent tailpipe standards and limit other states from following suit. Gov. Jerry Brown has vowed to fight the proposed rollback.

But the researchers were puzzled by the policy reversal, prompting them to conduct an independent assessment of the government’s economic analysis used to justify the change. The authors are among the world’s top experts in environmental economics and climate change, including the study of fuel economy standards.

Their study describes a pattern of selective fact-picking and distortion throughout the government’s analysis. It finds that the 2018 analysis contains adjustments to a prior review of 2016, but nonetheless it is “our conclusion that the 2018 [federal] analysis has fundamental flaws and inconsistencies and is at odds with basic economic theory and empirical studies … our summary judgment is that the changes in the 2018 NPRM [notice of proposed rulemaking] are on balance misleading.”

Specifically, the study cited two key changes in the 2018 document that deviate from standard cost-benefit protocols.

First, the scientists say the economic analysis mistakenly concludes that relaxation of the rule will shrink the vehicle fleet by 6 million cars by 2029, which greatly skews the bottom line. It also flies in the face of economic principles because, the economists argue, only more stringent standards — not fewer — would increase costs for cleaner, new vehicles, and as prices for new and used vehicles increase, fleet size would diminish — not the other way around. The revision “is simply inconsistent with basic economic theory,” the study finds.

By miscalculating the size of the auto fleet, the researchers say the report underestimates vehicle miles traveled, gasoline consumption, GHG emissions and traffic fatalities. A correct estimate of fatalities alone represents a $90.7 billion savings, which the federal proposal omits.

Second, the researchers applied the generally accepted global — rather than domestic — social cost of carbon as a criterion to value GHG emissions reductions. That change, plus the revision for the number of vehicles, closes 63 percent of the difference between negative costs and the break-even point for the CAFE standards — a positive net gain of at least $112 billion dollars, the study shows. Costs can also be reduced by technology innovation, including improvements to internal combustion engines, automotive materials and design and wider use of zero-emissions vehicles, the study finds.

Finally, the researchers describe how the government deviated from “preferred protocol” developed in another study that Bento published in the American Economic Review in 2009, and commonly used in cost-benefit analyses, including externalities such as energy security, air pollution, gasoline prices, GHG emissions and traffic congestion. Failing to account for those variables overestimates the cost of the regulation while underestimating benefits, the researchers found.

“It’s doubtful these miscalculations were inadvertent,” Bento said. “These are not mistakes, rather these are deliberate downsizing of benefits and inflating costs.”

The study represents an important precedent for the emerging USC Center for Sustainability Solutions, said Bento, who has a courtesy faculty appointment at the USC Dornsife School of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

“Rapid assessment exercises like this one, as well as direct dialogue with stakeholders, will become signature activities of our new USC Center for Sustainability Solutions,” Bento said. He added the study will help promote dialogue when he presents it to the OECD meeting this week.

###

Bento was joined on the study by Kenneth Gillingham of Yale University, Mark R. Jacobsen of UC San Diego, Christopher R. Knittel of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Benjamin Leard and Virginia McConnell of Resources for the Future, Joshua Linn of the University of Maryland, David Rapson of UC Davis, James M. Sallee of UC Berkeley, Arthur A. van Benthem of the University of Pennsylvania and Kate S. Whitefoot of Carnegie Mellon University. Bento, Gillingham, Jacobsen, Knittel, Sallee and Van Benthem are also affiliated with the National Bureau of Economic Research.

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December 11, 2018 3:55 am

Sorry, didn’t read many of the comments. 112 trillion dollars (SCARY BIGNUM) divided by 6 million is suddenly, um not all that much, per vehicle. Or if we turn it on its head, if you come up with a small number and then multiply it by lots of instances you come up with SCARY BIGNUM. Might be true. Bet there’s lots of other BIGNUMs around tho.

112e9 is a very big number. One might even think ‘ludicrous’, if only Musk hadn’t patented that word.

Another Paul
Reply to  Greg Locock
December 11, 2018 4:42 am

“112 trillion…divided by 6 million…not all that much, per vehicle”
You sure? If I did the math correctly, 112e+12 / 6e+6 = $18,666,666.66 112e9 is billion.

John the Econ
December 11, 2018 4:31 am

How much did we pay for that insipid CAFE logo?

Ross
December 11, 2018 4:59 am

Those that control the assumptions control the world.
USC doesn’t like it when the Trump administration will not stick its
head in their analytical noose.

Michael Jankowski
December 11, 2018 5:05 am

“…But the researchers were puzzled by the policy reversal, prompting them to conduct an independent assessment of the government’s economic analysis used to justify the change. The authors are among the world’s top experts in environmental economics and climate change, including the study of fuel economy standards…”

Easy to see what the conclusions would be from this “independent assessment” of “top experts” in “climate change” who allegedly undertook this on their own.

ADS
December 11, 2018 5:35 am

What happened to, if it saves just one life!

Tom in Florida
December 11, 2018 5:37 am

Fuel economy standards have always been bogus and the numbers manipulated. I have a lead foot. I like to accelerate from a stop as quickly as possible, it is a simple pleasure that I enjoy. I do not care about what that does to my fuel economy numbers.

LdB
Reply to  Tom in Florida
December 11, 2018 5:44 am

You know the saying indicative serving suggestion only 🙂

D Cage
Reply to  Tom in Florida
December 11, 2018 8:56 am

You do not need to manipulate to get a fraudulent fuel consumption figure. You choose the gear ratios to suit the test pattern so you get a car that is pig awful to drive and requires non stop gear shifting on all but utterly flat roads and with only a driver but looks good on paper. With four even mid weight passengers and a tiny amount of luggage some small cars need to use second gear frequently to even go at all.

Tom in Florida
Reply to  D Cage
December 11, 2018 11:26 am

You have defined manipulation.

Bryan A
December 11, 2018 5:45 am

“It appears federal officials cherry-picked data to support a predetermined conclusion that the clean-car standards will lead to too many highway deaths,” said Bento, the study’s lead author. “We do not support that conclusion and the data does not support that conclusion.”

The same statement can also be made for the science of climate change
“It appears Climate Change Scientists tuned Climate Models to support a predetermined conclusion that the slight amount of additional CO2 increase since the industrial revolution will lead to runaway climate warming,” … “We do not support that conclusion and the data does not support that conclusion.”only the Modeled climate does.

Wade
December 11, 2018 5:51 am

Let us do some math. I have made an Excel spreadsheet that calculates the cost per mile when gasoline costs a certain amount. First, one assumption to help with calculations: you always put exactly 17 gallons in your tank. Also remember that US fuel has that stupid 9/10 of a cent charge. If gas costs $2.309 per US gallon, increasing the fuel economy by 1 MPG saves $1.64 per 17 gallon fill-up, at $3.009 you save $2.13 per fill-up, at $3.509 you save $2.49 per fill-up. These numbers are rounded down. At $3.509 per gallon, you would save about $58.50 per 10,000 miles.

Let us have some fun. The Toyota Camry is rated 29 city, 41 highway MPG with the cheapest MSRP at $23,845. The Camry hybrid is rated 51 city, 53 highway MPG with the cheapest MSRP at $28,150. So the hybrid adds $4,305 to the cost. Assuming mixed city/highway use, let us pretend the average MPG of the regular Camry is 35 MPG and 52 for the hybrid version.

Let us first assume gas is still expensive at $3.509/gallon. With those numbers, after 10,000 miles you will save $327.76. Which means you will have to drive about 131,000 miles before the extra cost of the Camry hybrid is worth it. But let us cut $1.00 off the gas price and make it $2.509/gallon. Now you are saving only $234.36 per 10,000 miles. Which means you will now have to drive about 184,000 miles before the extra cost of the hybrid is justified. Toyota is pretty good with their hybrid, so let us assume you can go 150,000 miles before you need a battery replacement. Then you can see that when gas is under $3.009 per gallon, the hybrid model is never worth it because the cost of new batteries will add the expense.

Now obviously, this is simplistic. But it makes a point. We are at the point where the extra cost for the extra fuel economy is not good for the consumers unless gasoline is California expensive. If adding 1 MPG to a vehicle costs $1,000 more, even if gasoline is California expensive it will not be worth it. Anybody who ever says extra fuel economy is good for the consumers is taking the simplistic approach that 1 extra MPG costs nothing more. Already vehicle manufacturers are doing unsafe things to get that extra MPG, like taking out a spare tire. I read Consumer Reports and they mentioned what vehicle makers are doing, but they also moaned about Trump rolling back the CAFE requirements. I emailed them these facts, even a link to their own website about what vehicles are doing to get extra MPG, and told them the choices are consumer choice and lighter wallets or government choice. I too want high MPG, but I also want consumer choice first.

tom0mason
December 11, 2018 6:10 am

And let’s go back to WWII technology but with modern materials, manufacturing, and computer aided design to get opposed piston diesel engines that are crazy efficient across rated engine rpm …
https://youtu.be/UF5j1DvC954

ToddF
December 11, 2018 6:32 am

“Antonio Bento, a professor of public policy…”

Somehow I knew the only scientists behind this were scientists with the word “Political” in front of them.

What a fraud.

Bruce Cobb
December 11, 2018 6:37 am

CAFE standards are just one more example of government over-reach, and should be eliminated. Let the free market determine demand for fuel economy. No mandates, and no subsidies. Those are the tactics of Big Brother.

MarkW
December 11, 2018 7:26 am

As near as I can tell, they are arguing that making cars so expensive that few people can afford them, is a good thing.

Robert W Turner
December 11, 2018 7:31 am

“The authors are among the world’s top experts in environmental economics and climate change, including the study of fuel economy standards.” You know, idiots.

Robert W Turner
December 11, 2018 7:41 am

In a nutshell, they want to substantially increase the cost of new vehicles to where they are unaffordable for anyone but the ruling class and the middle class schmucks can ride the bus.

Gamecock
December 11, 2018 8:40 am

At the root of this is tyranny. Their theory being that government action is justified if the impact is judged to be, on balance, better.

Government’s authorization to interfere is never considered. Fuel efficiency of vehicles is none of the government’s business.

Liberty: freedom from arbitrary or despotic government.

27 mpg. 35 mpg. 55 mpg.

What do all have in common? They are absolutely arbitrary.

MarkW
Reply to  Gamecock
December 11, 2018 8:57 am

An addendum: “impact is judged to be, by the government, on the balance, better.
And the government gets to set up the standards by which the impacts will be judged, and the government will determine what data is to be used when making the judgement.
PS: Those who benefit from the regulations will be in charge of collecting data and final judements.

D Cage
December 11, 2018 8:50 am

In the cost benefit analysis what is the equation for the benefit based on the validity of climate change? Counting it as zero do you still get the benefit claimed? If you do not then the manufactures surely have the legal right to demand that they are shown that maximum temperature anomaly areas exactly match fossil fuel usage as even if there is heat flow the heat has to flow from high to low. Of course that assumes that using anomaly temperatures is not a fraudulent tactic.
If trade off for safety is done to get better economy surely it is a human right to decide for ourselves if we want to put our neck on the line and possibly die unnecessary as the Grenfell tower victims in the UK. Worse still they did just based on self assessed science when far more qualified experts exist outside the field in each area of “their” specialist study, whether it be data analysis, trend prediction or the computer modelling itself.

lb
December 11, 2018 9:57 am

CAFE standards are just one more example of government over-reach, and should be eliminated. Let the free market determine demand for fuel economy. No mandates, and no subsidies.

I think not all subsidies are bad.

I live in Switzerland. I love the view of pastures with cows grazing and their cowbells ringing. The pastures lined by apple and cherry trees.

Of course, this is not cost-effective. Here comes the subsidy. I’ll gladly pay some more taxes to keep some national heritage alive. Plus, I get to eat really good steaks.

nc
December 11, 2018 10:46 am

I must have missed something, did any of these self proclaimed scholars prove man’s minuscule C02 contribution to a minuscule atmospheric gas is going to warm my winter?

cbone
December 11, 2018 1:38 pm

CAFE standards are the manifestation of the silly notion held by lawmakers who believe that they can rewrite the laws of physics via legislative fiat.

kvs
December 11, 2018 3:01 pm

These authors are nitpicking. If vehicles on the road (currently over 250 million) is reduced by 6 million it is a rounding error.
The authors argue benefits they admit result from lower miles driven. I have not seen the studies that say if it is cheaper to drive, people drive less.
The authors chose the “generally accepted global ” SCC. The USA uses $40/ton, the only number I found for the global SCC was over $400/ton. Washington State just rejected a carbon tax of $15/ton so the public does not “generally accept” the global SCC. Either SCC is too high.

Gazzer
December 11, 2018 5:03 pm

I have rear a bunch of articles recently where folks in England have bought an old banger (as they call old cars) and insured it all because it was cheaper to buy one than to buy a railroad ticket. With the added bonus of the car still having residual value when the journey is complete.