Extreme Temperature Diary- Wednesday December 3rd, 2025/Main Topic: Trump Plans to Weaken Fuel Efficiency Rules for Cars and Trucks

Trump plans to weaken fuel efficiency rules for cars and trucks – The Washington Post

Trump plans to weaken fuel efficiency rules for cars and trucks

Executives from Ford, GM and Stellantis will be at the White House Wednesday as Trump rolls back rules pushing automakers to sell more electric cars.

By Nicolás Rivero and Dan Diamond

The Trump administration plans to announce the rollback of fuel efficiency rules for U.S. cars and trucks at a White House event this afternoon attended by executives from the country’s biggest automakers.

President Donald Trump has long derided such rules as an “EV mandate” that hurts the auto industry and raises car prices. He teased the upcoming announcement at a televised cabinet meeting Tuesday, saying, “We’re bringing back the automobile business.”

Executives from General Motors, Ford and Stellantis will be at the White House to mark the announcement.

“We appreciate President Trump’s leadership in aligning fuel economy standards with market realities,” Ford CEO Jim Farley, who will attend the announcement, wrote in a statement. “We can make real progress on carbon emissions and energy efficiency while still giving customers choice and affordability. This is a win for customers and common sense.”

White House officials did not answer questions about what changes they planned to make to fuel economy standards. But Trump’s signature second-term legislation, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, eliminated financial penalties for car companies that don’t meet federal fuel efficiency standards.

Although automakers can already ignore the rules without penalty, officially rolling the standards back makes it harder for a future administration to reinstate them, according to Dan Becker, director of the Safe Climate Transport Campaign at the environmental nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity.

With weaker rules, car companies will “make more gas guzzlers that guzzle oil and produce a lot of pollution and cost consumers more at the gas pump,” Becker said.

Trump signed a separate law in June to block California from enforcing a ban on new gas-powered car sales in 2035. Congress and the administration have also ended federal tax credits for EVs and pulled funding for building EVs and batteries.

Those policy changes have prompted car companies to walk back their commitments to sell more EVs, canceling planned factories and laying off workers. Analysts have slashed their predictions for future EV sales and raised their projections for greenhouse pollution. General Motors, which once vowed to only sell EVs by 2035, has shifted billions of dollars of planned investments from electric to gas-powered cars.

Federal fuel rules have ping-ponged from stricter to weaker standards as the White House has changed hands. Last year, President JoeBiden created strict rules that would have effectively forced automakers to sell more EVs. Now Trump is set to weaken them again.

The back-and-forth policy changes have put U.S. automakers in a difficult position, according to Rich Gold, a lobbyist who heads the public policy and regulation group at Holland and Knight.

“What the industry really needs is to be able to plan for a decade,” Gold said. “The auto industry doesn’t deal well with disruption and uncertainty. The infrastructure to build cars and get them to where they need to go takes a long time to build out.”

Even so, Gold said, automakers are happier with Trump’s lax rules than they were with Biden’s strict standards, which he said would have been hard to achieve.

Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa, who will attend the announcement at the White House, said in a statement the company “appreciates the Trump Administration’s actions to re-align the Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards with real world market conditions as part of its wider vision for a growing U.S. automotive industry.”

Republicans are also expected to join Trump, with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), who chairs the Senate’s Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, planning to praise the administration’s ongoing work around CAFE standards, according to a committee aide.

Environmentalists, meanwhile, lamented the latest blow to U.S. fuel economy rules.

“They’re going to raise costs for consumers at the gas pump and they’re going to signal to the Chinese that the world market is open to you and we’re just going to abandon it,” said Becker.

Most read Climate

By Nicolás Rivero Nicolás Rivero joined The Washington Post as a climate solutions reporter in 2023. Previously, he covered climate change for the Miami Herald and Quartz.follow on X@NicolasFuRivero

By Dan Diamond Dan Diamond is a White House reporter for The Washington Post, with a focus on policy and public health. His email is dan.diamond@washpost.com and you can reach him on Signal at @dan_diamond.01.follow on X@ddiamond

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