Thu. Nov 21st, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Laws that would force car makers to cut their carbon emissions are a step closer to reality, but the government still doesn’t have a pathway for them to pass parliament.

Car makers would be made to cut their carbon emissions each year by ensuring the fuel economy of the new cars they sell, when averaged out, meets an increasingly stringent CO2 limit — or else face heavy penalties.

The first draft of those laws was met with hesitancy by some car brands, as well as an opposition campaign that the laws would be a “tax on utes” that would push up the price of cars.

On Tuesday, the government quite literally won the auto industry to their side, being flanked by executives from Toyota, Hyundai and Tesla as they announced a compromise to weaken the proposed emissions standards.

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