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Problems with the proposed CAFE Standards for 2020

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The Senate bill on the new CAFE standards for 2020 mandates a fleet average of ... three purchasers of highly inefficient Hummer type SUVs or giant 'small' trucks. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Problems with the proposed CAFE Standards for 2020


1
Problems with the proposed CAFE Standards for 2020
  • Dennis Silverman
  • Physics and Astronomy
  • UC Irvine

2
Introduction
  • The Senate bill on the new CAFE standards for
    2020 mandates a fleet average of 35 miles per
    gallon (mpg) which includes both cars and small
    trucks (SUVs, trucks and vans).
  • We will show here problems with the single fleet
    average in actually being able to increase the
    mpgs of small trucks.

3
The problem of the total fleet average with very
efficient vehicles
  • Some of the present hybrids are even now
    achieving 50 mpg ratings (Toyota Prius and Honda
    Accord hybrids).
  • For each of those types made by an American
    automaker, they can preserve the total fleet
    average by making a 20 mpg SUV or small truck,
    since ½(5020)35 mpg.
  • This SUV allowance is even lower than the present
    21.5 mpg group average for small trucks.
  • One way around this problem is to exclude plug-in
    hybrids and electric cars from the average.

4
Future plug-in hybrids or electric cars.
  • Plug-in hybrids are projected to run 40 miles on
    pure battery power from the charge they acquire
    from utilities.
  • In terms of greenhouse gases, utilities produce
    the electrical energy more efficiently than the
    internal combustion engines of present hybrids.
  • Priuses that are outfitted as plug-in hybrids are
    said to obtain 70-75 mpg equivalent.
  • Plug-in hybrids are estimated to exceed 100 mpg
    based on greenhouse gas emissions from utilities,
    while under the 40 mile all electric range.
  • If the electricity is generated by nuclear,
    hydro, solar or wind power, than the greenhouse
    gas emissions are essentially negligible, and the
    effective mpg are well over 100 mpg.
  • Because of this, it is hard to provide a single
    effective mpg for these vehicles. A national
    average based on the average greenhouse gases for
    the nations electricity supply could be used.

5
CAFE ratings and super efficient plug-ins.
  • I havent found an explication of how the NHSTA
    will decide on mpg ratings for plug-ins.
  • Present tests are based on something like the
    first 12 minutes of driving, or the first 12
    miles of a drive.
  • Since those ranges are covered by the electric
    charge, even natural gas powered utilities should
    give and effective mpg of 100 mpg.
  • We assume this is included as the vehicle rating,
    until otherwise specified.
  • The average American commute is under 30 minutes
    or miles. If recharged at work, the electric
    nature of the plug-in could completely cover a
    days driving.

6
The problem with a single fleet average and the
super-efficient plug-ins.
  • We use an example where each plug-in hybrid
    produced in America is rate as 100 mpg.
  • Using the single fleet average, such a hybrid is
    65 mpg over the average.
  • The average can then be balanced say by three
    SUVs or small trucks that get
  • (35 - 1/3(65)) 35 22 13 mpg.

7
The reaction of an environmental public
  • By the time 2020 arrives, and without a wise
    rating or averaging policy by EPA, each
    environmentally minded citizen will know that his
    or her buying a super-efficient plug-in hybrid
    will be nullified by three purchasers of highly
    inefficient Hummer type SUVs or giant small
    trucks.
  • This inequity should be fixed before the CAFE
    bill is passed by the full Congress.
  • We discuss such fixes in the following slides.

8
The fix for SUVs and small trucks
  • It is better if SUVs and small trucks have their
    own average, whatever it is.
  • Detroit has proposed a 35 mpg average for cars
    and a 30 mpg average for SUVs and small trucks.
    That should be a more safeguarded small truck
    average that is a real requirement on them.
  • However, among the cars, the same unenvironmental
    countering of plug-in hybrids might occur with
    cars that are no more efficient than those that
    get the current 27.5 mpg average.

9
A truer average based on the fuel consumed
  • Most cars in America drive an average of 15,000
    miles per year.
  • The gas that is consumed by a car or small truck
    is given by
  • fuel miles driven x (gallons/mile)
  • This contains the reciprocal of the miles/gallon
    ratio currently used.
  • For simplicity, let us take this measure of fuel
    used in a 100 mile trip, and call it the CAFE
    Fuel Standard
  • Then the sample plug-in hybrid at 100 mpg will
    give a fuel standard of unity
  • fuel 100 miles / (100 mpg) 1

10
The New Fuel Standard
  • The typical vehicle at 35 mpg under the new fuel
    standard will be rated as
  • fuel standard 100 / 35 2.86 or
    approximately 3. (Environmentally it is 3 times
    as greenhouse gas polluting as the best car
    available, the plug-in hybrid.)
  • This would be the new fuel standard average for a
    100 mile trip that Congress or the states could
    adopt.

11
Applying the Fuel Standard to the SUV example
  • The example had a 100 mpg plug-in hybrid balanced
    by three 13 mpg SUVs under the 35 mpg average.
  • Applying the fuel standard (fs), the 13 mpg SUV
    will have fs 100 / 13 7.7.
  • Under a fuel standard average, the four vehicles
    above would average
  • ¼ (1 3 x (7.7)) ¼ ( 24.1) 6.0
  • not 3.0.

12
What is the vehicle mpg that balances a plug-in
in the fuel standard?
  • Take m as the mpg of the gas vehicle.
  • For one gas vehicle to balance one plug-in giving
    an average fuel standard of 3
  • fs ½(1100/m) 3 implies m 20 mpg.
  • For two gas vehicles balancing one plug-in
  • fs 1/3(12x100/m) 3 m 25.
  • For three gas vehicles against one plug-in
  • fs ¼(13x100/m) 3 m 27 mpg.
  • For four gas vehicles balancing one plug-in
  • fs 1/5(14x100/m) 3 m 29 mpg.

13
How does balancing work out for a major part of
the fleet being plug-ins?
  • From the previous slide, if 20 of the fleet are
    plug-ins, they are balanced 4 to 1, and the
    average requirement on gas vehicles is 29 mpg.
  • If 25 of the fleet are plug-ins, the average
    requirement on the gas vehicles is 27 mpg,
    comparable to the present mpg average on cars.
  • The above 3 gas to one plug-in balancing case
    used in the example with the present mpg
    averaging method only required gas vehicles to
    have a 13 mpg average.
  • So we conclude that the fuel usage standard comes
    close to what the Congress intends to occur with
    enhanced CAFÉ standards.
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