| December 4, 2008 |
Congress Should Tie Auto Loans to Fuel Efficiency, Expert Will Testify
A UCS expert will testify that any loans congress gives to American automobile manufacturers must come with guarantees of better fuel economy in their products.
- Congress should not weaken the $25 billion loan program it established in last year's energy bill. It requires a modest 25 percent increase in fuel economy for qualifying investments. Automakers already have to comply with this requirement under current fuel economy law and the plans they submitted to Congress are premised on using this initial $25 billion as Congress intended.
- Taxpayers deserve a return on their investment. Toward that end, automakers should comply with fuel economy standard increases earlier than required by current law. General Motors indicated it could do so in the plan it submitted to Congress.
- UCS estimates that if Detroit automakers met their projected 2015 fleetwide fuel economy target three years earlier, consumers would see net savings of more than $10 billion through 2020 and more than $30 billion through 2025, even if gasoline averages as low as $2 per gallon.
- Congress should require automakers to drop their lawsuits against clean car laws passed by several states.
Robert Nardelli, Chrysler chief executive officer
Alan Mulally, Ford president and chief executive officer
Ron Gettelfinger, United Auto Workers president
Felix G. Rohatyn, FGR Associates
Edward Altman, New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business
David Friedman, Union of Concerned Scientists Clean Vehicles Program research director
Jeffrey D. Sachs, Earth Institute director, Columbia University professor of sustainable development and professor of health policy and management
The Union of Concerned Scientists puts rigorous, independent science to work to solve our planet's most pressing problems. Joining with citizens across the country, we combine technical analysis and effective advocacy to create innovative, practical solutions for a healthy, safe, and sustainable future.

