- new car and truck prices will go up by over $1,200 by 2016. 2009 models, when the program starts, will go up an average of $200.
- savings of 1.7 MMT/yr in transportation GHG emissions by 2020. That will be down 18% by 2020 and 27% by 2030. That comes to a savings of 9,000 t/day by 2020 and 16,000 t/day by 2030. The state's total emission of GHGs, all sectors, is about 70 MMT/yr. So this saves about 2% of Oregon's total GHG emissions in 2020.
- savings of $25/mth in gas for the average car (assumes $3/gal gas).
- 165,000/yr new passenger cars are sold.
This is a big win for Governor Ted Kulongowski, who has made global warming a priority of his administration.
Naturally, the national auto industry is sueing. The Oregon Auto Dealers Association is naturally opposed. One backward-looking auto dealer said, "He's [Kulongowski] going to cost consumers unnecessarily at the end of the day because they'll be paying roughly $1,000 more a vehicle to comply with these emissions requirements, when it will affect a minuscule amount of our air quality."
I bet the cost per new car ultimately ends up being significantly less than ~$1000.
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