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California leads coalition against new car emissions standards by Staff Writers Los Angeles (AFP) May 1, 2018 A coalition of 18 US states on Tuesday sued President Donald Trump's administration over plans to roll back vehicle emissions standards. The suit, which was led by California, seeks to protect standards passed under Trump's predecessor Barack Obama that would raise fuel efficiency to about 50 miles per gallon by 2025. "The states joining today's lawsuit represent 140 million people who simply want cleaner and more efficient cars," California Governor Jerry Brown said in a statement. "This phalanx of states will defend the nation's clean car standards to boost gas mileage and curb toxic air pollution." California Air Resources Board Chair Mary Nichols added that the standards the states were seeking to protect were adopted in 2012 but were meant to take effect in 2022. "They were based on the best judgment of engineers about what technology could achieve. And in fact they are being achieved today, years ahead of the deadlines, because of the good work of the auto industry," she said. Connecticut, Delaware, the District of Columbia that houses the US capital Washington, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington state have all joined the suit. Filed in the US Court of Appeals in Washington, it targets the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Since assuming office, Trump has taken an axe to the environmental regulations he inherited from his predecessor, from pulling out of the Paris climate change accord to allowing fracking on public land to cutting protections for numerous endangered species. Many of the domestic efforts have been led by his controversial EPA chief Scott Pruitt, a climate change skeptic with ties to the fossil fuel industry who has recently been in the spotlight over ethical lapses. Liberal California, the country's most populous and wealthiest state, is at odds with the Trump administration on numerous fronts, including immigration, with the state having declared itself a "sanctuary" for undocumented migrants.
Can fish school cars in how to drive together? Paris (AFP) April 27, 2018 In the not so distant future autonomous vehicles may rule the road. Could the ability of fish to swim together provide insights for engineers to make automated driving safer? "One thinks about autonomous cars in isolation. But what is also important is the information which is being shared between cars," Trevor Worthington, Shanghai-based vice president for product development at Ford Asia Pacific, told journalists this week at the Beijing auto show. "For example, I'm a car driver now on the roa ... read more
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