Posted on 12/18/2024 8:16:42 PM PST by SeekAndFind
California’s zero emission regulations are causing truck shortages and rising costs, according to the trucking and heavy-duty vehicle industry.
State officials plan to end traditional combustion truck sales by 2036.
California’s Advanced Clean Trucks (ACT) regulation requires manufacturing companies to gradually increase the percentage of zero-emission vehicles (ZEVs) they sell on the market—such as electric or hydrogen—and reduce the number of gas and diesel trucks.
Anthony Bento, chief legal officer for the California New Car Dealers Association, said dealers in the state have seen dramatic decreases in available trucks for the 2024 model year as a result of the new rules.
“These rules are decreasing product availability, and when there’s less product available, there’s increasing costs,” Bento told The Epoch Times. “The on-the-ground reality is that California consumers and businesses are going to be paying more, because there’s not an adequate supply of new product available that meets customers’ demands.”
California’s goals include reducing tailpipe emissions and requiring the progress and adoption of advanced clean trucks. By the end of the 2024 model year, 5 to 9 percent of sales in California must be ZEVs.
The ACT regulation was adopted by the California Air Resources Board (CARB) in 2020 and approved by the state Office of Administrative Law in March 2021.
Industry representatives say the rules are forcing businesses to drive out of state to purchase trucks and parts that are non-compliant, leave the state of California, or close up shop altogether. They also say truck business owners are delaying upgrading their fleet so as to not deal with the requirements.
Mark Baatz, owner of Tow Industries in Los Angeles, which supplies trucks to emergency roadside services, told host Siyamak Khorrami on EpochTV’s “California Insider” in an interview published on Dec. 15, that the towing industry doesn’t yet have any available ZEV options.
“In our industry, regardless of cost, there isn’t an electric truck that works for us at this time,” he said. “That next technology hasn’t arrived for us yet.”
As a result, the number of diesel trucks available has been reduced dramatically, he said. Last year, his company sold around 600 trucks, and next year, only around 30 to 50 trucks are expected to be available. He said this will heavily impact the emergency towing industry.
Meanwhile, CARB representatives have said the state’s ACT regulations may not be the problem, citing a nationwide downturn in the market, supply chain issues carrying over from previous years, and manufacturers not being sufficiently prepared to comply with other emissions regulations.
“Inconsistencies in communication have led dealers and fleets to believe that the ACT regulation’s requirements are leading to the product shortages in the medium- and heavy-duty space which, upon discussions with all affected parties, is not backed by the data available,” Steven Cliff, executive officer for CARB, wrote in a memo on Sept. 25.
“Additionally, some vehicle upfitters producing specialty vehicles, including tow trucks, have reached maximum production capacity thresholds nationwide and cannot increase production levels, which affects the manufacturers’ ability to accept new orders.”
Cliff also said California zero-emission trucks have increased in price by an average of $86,512 since 2021–22, while such European trucks have decreased in price by an average of $12,641 during that same time period.
“There appear to be no clear reasons for this disparity between regions,” he wrote.
On Dec. 6, the board published a “Myth vs. Fact” fact sheet to address concerns raised about the ACT rules, stating for example, “The ACT regulation does not have any provisions prohibiting or restricting the types of diesel-powered vehicles that can be registered or operated in California.”
CARB did not reply to The Epoch Times’ request for comment by publication time.
A separate major regulation facing the California trucking industry is the Heavy-Duty Low NOx rule, which went into effect in 2021 and requires a 90 percent reduction in certain emissions for new heavy-duty vehicles compared to traditional diesel engines by 2031.
At a CARB board meeting on Oct. 24, Bento said data suggests that the magnitude of declines in available trucks are significant—over 80 percent for Class 8 heavy-duty trucks weighing more than 33,000 pounds—and the scale of these declines is unique to California. Therefore, he said they cannot be attributed to national or economic factors.
If the supply of new combustion trucks does not increase, businesses that rely on these vehicles will be left with a couple of choices, Bento said.
“Continue to operate their older, more polluting vehicles for longer or purchase vehicles from out of state that do not comply with CARB requirements,” he said. “Both options undermine our state’s environmental goals and will harm air quality.”
Brian Banks, owner of Action Towing and Road Service in the San Francisco Bay Area, said that while he supports clean energy and wants his children to live in a world with clean air, he also wants to support his 200 workers and their families.
“Unfortunately at this point, there is no application that will work in our industry. I ask the board to please reconsider the regulations and continue to make amendments to allow us to run our businesses until there is a solution,” he said.
Other commenters suggested emergency tow trucks be exempt from the ACT regulation or postpone the regulation altogether until the technology catches up.
Ashley Porter, sales manager for Oakland-based Tec Equipment, said she has seen many of their large truck customers leave California or pass the costs of updating their fleet onto customers.
She said it has been heart-wrenching to walk her clients through the ACT and other regulations and noted that certain businesses don’t have the resources to meet the requirements.
“The impact of these regulations as it is written today will impact the California economy negatively for years to come,” Porter said.
Pure lunacy.
Yes, everyone will be poorer now, but in the future, we will all live like those movies from our own Hollywood. Just trust us, and that hyper-train from SF to LA will be our shining star. And don’t forget the economic rocket that comes from all of our migrants…..
1 year without money laundering will push Cali into full on bankruptcy.
💯.
Enjoy the suck, Californikators!
Atlas Shrugged in living color.
The best way to punish liberals is to let them do as they will.
Well said. And not a cent in aid should go to them.
Continue to transport as much “stuff” as possible but no food.
Unreliable towing and and insane regulations prevent it.
The truckers can tell them the truth, cheap plastic crap does not spoil if left in the truck for a week.
.
I watch a tv show called “HIGHWAY FROM HELL” filmed in CANADA.
IT is about wrecks on the roads & the towing companies that clean up everything.
The wreckers shown on that show & the AMAZING work that they do-—WILL NEVER BE REPLACED BY EV VEHICLES, IMO.
Some of those trucks & trailers & loads weigh over 80,000 #.
“By the end of the 2024 model year, 5 to 9 percent of sales in California must be ZEVs”.
And when they are not?
Seriously, how will they enforce this tripe?
2024 end of model year is LESS than one year away.
Exactly.
Syrict emission standards are acceptable in the Los Angeles valley.
Why saddle the entire state with this “rule”?
When is the ICC going to get involved? This all directly affects interstate commerce big time. Ca laws should not impact interstate commerce and create regulatory burdens, hardships, and costs for other citizens and businesses in other states. They already slipped by with unconstitutional regulations that almost destroyed the trucking industry once. Ca regulations should not have any jurisdiction over out of state trucks coming into Ca at all.
Just like before it will start as regulating trucks in ca, then it will move to regulating all trucks coming into Ca also. This is when it violates interstate commerce.
So-called ‘green’ hydrogen is not just a joke, it’s a gigantic preposterous cluster-farce. The present source of industrial hydrogen is natural gas, and the hydrogen produces far less energy than the gas that makes it. Much of the wasted energy in this process is turned into the hated carbon dioxide - more of it than would have been produced than if the gas used to produce it had been used to propel the trucks in the first place.
Proponents dream that ‘green’ hydrogen will be produced by electrolyzing water. For that to happen, the power will have to come from wind or solar cells. That means there must be massive over-building of wind and solar generating. Enough is needed to supply ALL electricity on hot or cold days for domestic use, car charging, heating, and cooling, but also enough also to charge batteries in the summer to last over the winter. After all that, there must be enough left over to make green hydrogen - massive amounts of it.
These massive amounts must be stored somewhere, and transported to where it’s used. It can’t be transported via existing pipelines since it destroys the steel in them by hydrogen embrittlement. It’s also the smallest molecule in the universe. That means it leaks out the tiniest of gaps in any container, particularly at high pressures. It just leaks away. And then after it leaks away, it gets transformed in the atmosphere into a....particle that - guess what - warms the earth.
“Hey! My Tesla is broken down, could you send a tow truck?”
“Sure pal, they will be right there as soon as they manage to make one that complies with the regulations you voted for.”
The new rules coming are only going to make it worse. If this keeps going, we may as well scratch Calif. off the list of states & sell it to China on the condition they move it back to their mainland.
Tesla's are not for everyone but they are selling very well
Check this out. The semis are selling well too
Spot the electric tow truck
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.