| US House Bill Lets California Restrict Car Emissions 
    US: March 7, 2008
 
 
 WASHINGTON - A bill was introduced in the US House of Representatives on 
    Thursday that would overturn the Environmental Protection Agency's decision 
    to prevent California from limiting the amount of greenhouse gas emissions 
    spewed by cars.
 
 
 The EPA last December turned down California's request for a waiver from 
    federal law that would have permitted the state to cut vehicle carbon 
    dioxide emissions, which when implemented would have likely have raised the 
    required fuel efficiency of cars and also fought global warming.
 
 A group of 60 House lawmakers introduced legislation that would immediately 
    grant California's waiver request and also clear the way for 12 other states 
    to set vehicle tailpipe emissions standards.
 
 "The Environmental Protection Agency's decision defied the science, defied 
    the states, and defied common sense," said Rep. Peter Welch of Vermont, who 
    co-sponsored the bill.
 
 "With consumers feeling the pinch of record fuel prices and the evidence of 
    global warming overwhelming, the Bush administration must lead, follow, or 
    get out of the way," he said.
 
 Similar legislation was introduced in the US Senate this year by Barbara 
    Boxer of California.
 
 The 12 states wanting to follow California in regulating tailpipe emissions 
    are Connecticut, Maryland, Maine, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New Mexico, New 
    York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington.
 
 The governors of Arizona, Colorado, Florida and Utah also have committed to 
    implementing similar vehicle emissions standards.
 
 (Reporting by Tom Doggett; Editing by Walter Bagley)
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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