Clean Cars Would Slash Oil Use and Pollution this Summer

Environment Virginia

Clean Cars Would Slash Oil Use and Pollution this Summer

Arlington, VA – As Virginians get ready for summer road trips, an Environment Virginia Research & Policy Center report finds that cleaner, more fuel efficient cars would significantly slash oil consumption and global warming pollution across the state. The report, Summer on the Road: Going Farther on a Gallon of Gas, was released as the Obama administration is on the verge of finalizing fuel efficiency and global warming pollution standards for cars and light trucks that achieve a 54.5 mpg standard by 2025.

Congressman Jim Moran (VA-8) remarked on the new report: “From an economic, environmental and national security perspective, we must reduce our dependency on oil.  This new report from Environment America highlights the importance of moving forward with cleaner, more fuel efficient cars.” 

“Clean cars can help Virginia families travel to beautiful places like the Shenandoah or Virginia Beach this summer, without creating as much of the pollution that threatens those very places,” added John Cross, Federal Transportation Advocate for Environment Virginia.  “As hot as this summer is shaping up to be, the last thing we need is more oil burning in our cars and more global warming pollution heating up our atmosphere. But in some of the cars and trucks out there today, a gallon of gas disappears more quickly than a snowball in July. Let’s beat the heat by getting cleaner cars on the road with the Obama administration’s proposed clean car standard.”

If the cars and trucks on the road today met the proposed 54.5 mpg standard, it would slash statewide oil  dependence by 455 million gallons and cut our global warming pollution by 4 million metric tons this summer alone. That’s the equivalent of taking between three and four coal plants offline for the whole summer. Those savings mean we would burn less cash too, saving the average Virginia family $560 at the pump in a summer.

“Not only could you take that trip to Virginia Beach while burning much less oil along the way, but you could book the family a hotel for a couple of extra days with the money you’re saving,” added Cross. “The only solution that will relieve the pain we’re feeling at the pump is the one that will protect Virginia’s environment and health too. Our oil dependence doesn’t just cost us at the pump—it threatens our shores with spills like the disaster in the Gulf, spews toxic pollution into our air, and contributes more to global warming than any other fuel. We simply need to get off oil, and a strong, 54.5 mpg clean car standard would be the single biggest step we’ve ever taken. We applaud the Obama administration for its work to make these benefits a reality.”  

“All the better, drivers do not have to wait until 2025 to reap the benefits of cleaner cars,” noted Cross, citing the Natural Resources Defense Council’s related report, Relieving Pain at the Pump. “Thanks to the Obama administration’s first phase of standards that took effect this year, a bumper crop of fuel efficient cars have already started coming to the showroom floor.” The number of models getting more than 30 mpg has tripled since the first phase of standards for years 2012 through 2016 were announced.

President Obama proposed the new 54.5 mpg standard this past fall. The proposal has the support of 13 major automakers, as well as the United Auto Workers and numerous environmental and consumer groups. These national standards grew out of the leadership of 14 states, led by California, which previously adopted state-level standards.

Environment Virginia was joined today by Dennis Dineen of the Electric Vehicle Association of Greater Washington in releasing the report, who talked about his experience owning one of the cleanest cars on the road today, a Chevy Volt: “I have real world experience with this car. There’s nothing I give up with it– it performs in every way as any other sports sedan could—but I have everything to gain from gasoline savings. And electricity is much cheaper than gasoline.” 

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Environment Virginia Research & Policy Center is a 501(c)3 organization dedicated to a cleaner, greener, healthier future.