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Tesla Presses Its Case On Fuel Standards

An anonymous reader writes: Tesla is preparing their case to leave federal mileage and emissions regulations intact, or make them even more strict. In addition, the company is fighting other car makers from loosening more stringent regulations in California. The WSJ reports: "Tougher regulations could benefit Tesla, while challenging other auto makers that make bigger profits on higher-margin trucks and sport-utility vehicles. Tesla's vice president of development, Dairmuid O'Connell, plans to argue to auto executives and other industry experts attending a conference on the northern tip of Michigan that car companies can meet regulations as currently written. 'We are about to hear a lot of rhetoric that Americans don't want to buy electric vehicles,' Mr. O'Connell said in an interview ahead of a Tuesday presentation in Traverse City, Mich. 'From an empirical standpoint, the [regulations] are very weak, eminently achievable and the only thing missing is the will to put compelling products on the road.'"

15 of 291 comments (clear)

  1. Not surprising by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Every company likes regulations that limits competition or hurts competitors; while fighting any that impacts its profitability.

    --
    I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    1. Re:Not surprising by mc6809e · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And politicians enjoy the power to write regulation enabling law so as to extort campaign contributions from companies.

    2. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Actually, I don't benefit. Thanks to the EPA, car makers can't engineer diesels to run with significant reliability. If I go buy a diesel car, there is a good chance that the DPF may get plugged (which is a $3200 item), or many other issues.

      Even though the piss tank (DEF) is for the exhaust, there is always the chance of the EPA-mandated DRM on the ECM saying that it is empty and disabling the vehicle. Nothing like getting the "5 more starts allowed" warning when low on fuel in the middle of nowhere, especially nowhere near a repair depot, even with the pee can is full.

      Am I benefiting from the EPA's Draconian legislation? No. There are diminishing returns on high MPG, and any benefits I gain are lost due to the vehicle being in the repair shop.

      In general, has the US benefited from the EPA in the past 15 years? No. Too many regulations too fast. The entire steel industry was shut down due to the EPA and now there are more resources consumed because the steel that was once made here in the US now has to travel by ship, which has made pollution worldwide worse.

      Granted the EPA has done some good, but in the past 15 years, they have cost many Americans their jobs, while making vehicles less reliable, with the parts that break extremely expensive.

    3. Re:Not surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      In general, has the US benefited from the EPA in the past 15 years?

      Yes, far more so than it would from the pollution that would have otherwise probably not been addressed.

      Too many regulations too fast.

      Let's see some data.

      The entire steel industry was shut down due to the EPA and now there are more resources consumed because the steel that was once made here in the US now has to travel by ship, which has made pollution worldwide worse.

      Are you sure about this? Production of steel in the US was ~100 million tons in 2000, it's now ~85 million, but much of that drop can be attributed to the faltering economy, and the job losses? Technology, as productivity increased, while demand did not.

      That, and China feeding its own domestic markets, in order to cut down on that ship travel you dislike, but then exceeding its own domestic demand, so having excess to dispose of through export.

      Granted the EPA has done some good, but in the past 15 years, they have cost many Americans their jobs, while making vehicles less reliable, with the parts that break extremely expensive.

      If you want the EPA to require your car to be made reliable, I think that's a bit excessive, wouldn't there be some other means by which you can require that?

      Regulating the pollution levels is enough, that's something harder to detect, as the effects are far more separated from their causes.

    4. Re:Not surprising by sjames · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You will enjoy not dying early from pollution related illness even though you won't attribute that to the EPA regulations that actually extended your life and your health.

  2. Smart by Gordo_1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hey I like Tesla as much as the next guy, but wake me up when a corporation lobbies government in a way that goes against their own self-interest.

    The theory here is that if more stringent fuel mileage standards are maintained, it will force traditional automakers to either make more tiny, anemic 4 cylinder gas engines (early 1980s anyone?) or push further into hybrid and electric car territory in order to deliver meaningful power without as much (or any) gasoline. In either situation, Tesla stands to gain as either they compete with comparatively fast, powerful vehicles (Model S, X, 3) or they are competing apples to apples in electrics/plug-in hybrids for which they'll have significant control over lithium ion battery production with the Gigafactory, and a 5-10 year head start at building ground up purpose-built all-electrics.

    1. Re:Smart by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hey I like Tesla as much as the next guy, but wake me up when a corporation lobbies government in a way that goes against their own self-interest.

      Wake me up when they prove that they're actually performing battery swaps, which is required at this phase to get all the credits they're getting. There's no evidence that they can do it, let alone that they are doing it. (If anyone feels differently, let's see some photographic evidence of a swap actually taking place; I am not interested in seeing the pictures of the car sitting in the swap station with nothing happening.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Smart by Gordo_1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Furthermore, why all the hate over the credits? Tesla collects government incentives, Oil and gas companies collect government incentives, other automobile manufacturers collect government incentives. Yet plenty of folks constantly point out how the first successful auto manufacturing upstart in 80 years in America, apparently reaps some mythical unfair advantage over everyone else.

    3. Re:Smart by jandersen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      ... theory here is that if more stringent fuel mileage standards are maintained, it will force traditional automakers...

      I'm no fan of cars in general, although I would probably go for an electric vehicle next time I need to change. It looks to me like they (Tesla) are pushing for a standard that only or predominantly looks at the emissions from the vehicle, whereas the obviously right thing would be to count in all the emissions required to produce and maintain vehicles.

    4. Re:Smart by Zobeid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The top range Tesla now is 270 miles per charge. How often do you drive more than 270 miles in a day? Be honest now. . . Because most of us rarely do that.

      Recharging time. . . It takes 20 seconds to plug in your car in the evening. In the morning you have a full charge. That's way more convenient than going to the gas station.

      If you're on the highway, taking that epic road trip, then yeah. . . You're screwed. It's gonna kill your soul when you have to stop for a 20 or 30 minute quick charge a couple of times during the long day's driving. And you totally weren't going to stop like that in your gas car, because you are a superhuman who never needs to rest, eat or use the bathroom.

      I have no idea what "shitty little cars with no cargo" you are referring to. I thought the topic was Tesla? The Model S is a full-sized car with enormous cargo space, front and back. You can haul your drum kit in it.

    5. Re:Smart by babybird · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That's perfectly valid-- you're among the 1-5% of the population that the current Tesla isn't an ideal fit for at least several times a year. For everyone else's use case, it's way more than adequate. It may even be adequate for you, depending on how many of those trips you make. If you save enough gas during the rest of your year, the difference may be enough to rent a vehicle for those trips to your mom's house and still leave you break even or profitable relative to driving something else all year long (ignoring whether or not you can afford a Tesla right now in the first place of course).

      It's not ideal in every possible situation today, and it likely never will be, but that's not a true negative because neither will any other vehicle be. But it's beneficial when it's ideal or close enough to ideal in enough situations, and for most people, Tesla has already surpassed that point (again, save for the current initial cost of the vehicle). It's already better than all of its most direct competition on most, but not all metrics, and most of its competition on several other metrics, and that was the purpose in making them in the first place-- demonstrating that it can actually be done in the real world.

      So there's really very little reason for the auto industry to try to argue an opposing position if that position is already demonstrably false.

      --
      Keith D.
    6. Re:Smart by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Any system which allows for refuelability/battery swapping has a much better chance of competing with current transportation fuel methods.

      Nice assertion. I'll counter with one of my own: Battery swapping has negligible effect on the ability of EVs to compete with ICEVs for consumer travel. The only case where it's of use is in long-distance, non-stop travel, which is a miniscule percentage of road miles and which can in most cases be done with a rental vehicle. As long as the people in the car need to refuel every few hours, all you need is enough range to go as far as the people can, and a sufficiently-fast recharge time that by the time the people eat the car is ready to go again.

      What's needed for EVs to compete isn't battery swapping, it's lower prices for vehicles with adequate range. The Model S has the range required, now. The Nissan LEAF and similar cars are in the ballpark on price. When we get a $25K (new) EV sedan with a 250-mile range, they'll sell like hotcakes in suburban middle-class America, and pollution levels in places like LA will decline dramatically in just a few years.

      This isn't to say that battery swapping never makes sense, or that better highway and home charging infrastructure (particularly for apartment dwellers) doesn't matter, but solving the price/range problem will put EVs over the hump and the rest will follow naturally.

      --
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  3. Tesla asks for huge tax on meat: by olddoc · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Suppose Tesla was concerned about man made climate change. The company might want to decrease animal protein consumption because methane from farm animals is far more important than automobile emissions: http://timeforchange.org/are-c... If the government can force us to drive different cars, they can force us to eat different foods. Come on Tesla: lobby to force all bacon and hamburger be made with 55% tofu. See how popular you are. Disclosure: I drive a P85D and I love it. It is an amazing car and works great for my family.

    --
    Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
  4. 4-bangers less anemic than they used to be by swb · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As much as I dislike the NY Times trend towards posting videos, it was interesting to see their review of the new Volvo XC90 with a 4 cylinder engine that's supercharged AND turbocharged. IIRC the review says its rated at nearly 300 HP.

    It's a large and fairly heavy car, so I don't think combined mileage was more than 25 MPG but it's definitely an improvement over the 4.4L V8 (my S80 with the same engine gets about 17 combined).

    The only thing I'd worry about is if they're extracting Fast and Furious style horsepower from 4 cylinder engines is that they'll get Fast and Furious levels of engine life.

    Frankly, I don't think Tesla needs to play the bootlegger-and-baptist game with fuel economy regulations to be competitive with ICE carmakers, they just need to be price and performance competitive within their model segments. At the oligarch country club where I do some work, I've seen a lot more Teslas and a lot fewer new S550s and my guess is that most of the drivers don't give a shit about the fuel cost or environmental impact of what they drive. They want performance and look-at-me status, and if it gives them an environmental cachet with their daughters' bohemian ivy league friends, so much the better,

    The bigger challenge will be providing a car the plebes find competitive at the $30k mark. For tofu-eating yoga types, this won't be hard. They would drive a Prius or a Fit anyway. It's the Honda Pilot or Santa Fe buyers they need to appeal to and provide a competitive alternative.

  5. Re:That word does not mean what you think it does by itsdapead · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You need Superchargers only on highways, otherwise you charge at home or at work. You do not need them particularly in cities.

    Unless, of course, you are visiting a city and need a recharge to get back home.

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.