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California vows to fight Trump administration's plan on emissions by Staff Writers Los Angeles (AFP) Sept 17, 2019 California officials on Tuesday vowed to fight President Donald Trump's administration over its plan to revoke the state's authority to set its own tailpipe emissions standards, saying the measure was part of a "vendetta." The call to arms followed news reports that California's power to impose stricter emissions rules than those set by the federal government would be scrapped on Wednesday by the Environmental Protection Agency, while the president is visiting the liberal-leaning state. California for years has set its own emissions standards and more recently announced a deal with four auto makers calling for tighter emissions standards than those planned by the Trump administration. The agreement infuriated the administration, which rebuked the carmakers and claimed the deal violated anti-trust laws. California Governor Gavin Newsom said Tuesday that the plan to undermine the state's power was part of a "political vendetta" by the president's administration. "California won't ever wait for permission from Washington to protect the health and safety of children and families," he said in a statement. He added that taking away California's right to maintain stricter emissions standards could have "devastating consequences" on children's health and air quality in a state that has long led the nation in efforts to battle climate change. California Attorney General Xavier Becerra also denounced the plan and vowed to mount a legal challenge. "The evidence is irrefutable: today's clean car standards are achievable, science-based, and a boon for hardworking American families and public health," he said. "It's time to remove your blinders, President Trump, and acknowledge that the only person standing in the way of progress is you. "You have no basis and no authority to pull this waiver," he added. "We're ready to fight for a future that you seem unable to comprehend; we'll see you in court if you stand in our way."
Protests against German car industry rev up in Frankfurt Frankfurt Am Main (AFP) Sept 14, 2019 Thousands of protesters, many on bicycles, gathered in the southern German city of Frankfurt Saturday to protest outside the city's motor show, part of a new wave of environmental activism. Between 15,000 and 25,000 people - according to estimates from the police and the organisers respectively - turned out calling for radical change, in a sign of growing impatience with the motor industry. Campaigners are pressing Germany's car industry to go green and abandon internal combustion engines. Sat ... read more
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