Home>Articles>Nebraska & 16 Other States Sue California Over Zero-Emissions Trucking Mandates

Truck on highway in Bakersfield, CA. (Photo: Clari Massimiliano, Shutterstock)

Nebraska & 16 Other States Sue California Over Zero-Emissions Trucking Mandates

States hope to halt California’s EV trucking regulations

By Evan Symon, May 14, 2024 12:38 pm

In a lawsuit filed on Monday, Nebraska and 16 other states sued the State of California over their “Advanced Clean Fleet” electric vehicle (EV) truck mandates, including laws where only new zero-emissions trucks would be sold in California beginning in 2035 and where only zero emissions trucks would be on California roads by the 2040s.

The lawsuit dates back to last year, when the California Air Resources Board (CARB) began enacting clean fleet regulations. In 2023 CARB announced that the sale of all new diesel big rig trucks and buses will be banned in the state of California starting in 2036, similar to the state’s new gas-powered car sale ban that is currently set for 2035. In addition to the 2036 sales ban on new diesel trucks and buses, CARB also announced that all trucks in California must be zero-emissions by 2042. Under these new regulations, also known as the Advanced Clean Fleets rule, CARB aimed to achieve a total zero-emissions truck and bus fleet by 2045, as well as have at least 1.6 million zero-emission medium- and heavy-duty trucks operating in the state by 2048.

These new rules were met with heavy opposition. In October, the California Trucking Association (CTA) sued the state over the Advanced Clean Fleet rules. However, the suit did little to halt the advancing laws. That’s when other states began to grow upset. As some of the deadlines, including the 2027 deadline where all medium- and heavy-duty vehicles acquired by state and local governments must be emissions free, come into view, states found that California could have more power over national usage. As 30% of all U.S. vehicle imports come through California ports, California’s electric trucking mandates essentially mean that they are for the entire country as well.

This led to the Nebraska led lawsuit announcement Monday, with 16 other states backing Nebraska up. The suit, filed in the Eastern District of California, charges both CARB Executive Officer Dr. Steven Cliff and California Attorney General Rob Bonta that the Advanced Clean Fleet regulations would go over federal law, disrupt supply chains across the country, not be able to handle higher payload capacities, and would harm all states that didn’t have such mandates since so many trucking routes were California based.

In addition to the California suit, Nebraska and 23 other states also sued the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) over a new rule passed in March which directs that 30% of heavy duty trucks in the U.S. have to be electric by 2032.

“If the electric vehicle trucking mandates aren’t stopped, Nebraskans will pay the price,” said Nebraska Attorney General Mike Hilgers on Monday. “About 30% of U.S. imports arrive in California. This rule will be far too costly for consumers. These things don’t have the same kind of range; they can’t take the same kind of payload capacity. We know that those costs would flow through to customers. It would have a devastating impact on Nebraska businesses and Nebraska customers.

“California and an unaccountable EPA are trying to transform our national trucking industry and supply chain infrastructure. This effort—coming at a time of heightened inflation and with an already-strained electrical grid—will devastate the trucking and logistics industry, raise prices for customers, and impact untold number of jobs across Nebraska and the country. Neither California nor the EPA has the constitutional power to dictate these nationwide rules to Americans.”

“We feed the world, we save the planet,” Nebraska Governor Jim Pillen said. “The ports up and down California — you’re going to tell us we can’t get our product to the ports? It’s beyond comprehension.”

17 states challenge California

The 17 states in the suit, State of Nebraska v. Cliff, also zeroed in on the Advanced Clean Fleets regulations in the suit, pointing out that the regulations “Masquerade as a rule for in-state conduct. But by leveraging California’s large population and access to international ports on the West Coast, Advanced Clean Fleets exports its in-state ban nationwide, creating harms which are certain to reach Plaintiffs’ States.”

“The regulations will force trucks to retire their internal combustion-powered engines because California will not allow them on the state’s roads. With California’s international ports being a hub for much of the nation’s imports, they could disrupt the supply chain, slow transport of goods, and raise prices. While California can regulate emissions, they cannot regulate the emissions of vehicles moving from state-to-state without the approval of Congress under the Congressional Commerce Clause.”

To stop the Californian policies from influencing nationwide regulations and commerce, the 17 states want the implementation of California’s Advanced Clean Fleets regulations to be halted. In addition, they also want an injunction so that California cannot have any of the regulations enforceable during the trial.

As of Tuesday, neither Bonta or Cliff have yet to comment on the Nebraska suit. However, trucking and legal experts have said that the Nebraska suit will likely have a real chance of moving forward, which is currently leaving many Californian lawmakers and environmental advocates on edge.

“The Nebraska lawsuit makes a lot of excellent points,” explained Simon Bernard, a trucking advocate who works with many trucking and shipping companies on logistics and fleet issues, to the Globe on Tuesday. “A lot of similar lawsuits in the past didn’t tie in commerce so much or what the effects of having so many vehicles come through California really are.”

“This, as well as the EPA lawsuit, also shows just how not ready most states are when it comes to electric vehicles and how unsatisfied many are with the current limits of large electric trucks. They hold a lot less, the range is greatly reduced, and the battery charging times are much higher. Short haul, especially with small trucks, it could work. But, as the suit points out, this is connected to something mass scale and the readiness is not even close.”

“And this could backfire now too, with California’s regulations now being on the line. It will be interesting to hear what CARB and Bonta will say, because, until Monday, they only ever had some state groups challenge this, not a coalition of states taking on them and the EPA.”

Attorney General Bonta and the California Air Resources Board are expected to make statements on the lawsuit soon.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email
Evan Symon
Spread the news:

 RELATED ARTICLES

15 thoughts on “Nebraska & 16 Other States Sue California Over Zero-Emissions Trucking Mandates

  1. GOD BLESS Nebraska (and the other 17 supporting states) for bringing the California a-hole virtue-signalers to heel, and smack them upside their pointy heads with a dose of RATIONAL LOGIC….

    Imagine having a state Attorney General who is actually INTELLIGENT, as is Mike Hilgers, and not a dumbass like Rob Bonta, who makes laws that have NO beneficial economic impact to his constituents and are actually HARMFUL to their economic well-being…

    THANK YOU, NEBRASKA!!!

    1. I think we should start a letter writing campaign thanking the State of Nebraska for saving us from our Affirmative Action elites trying to turn California back to the 1860’s moving goods by horse and wagon.,

    2. Imagine having a CARB director with an actual science background, instead of an activist/lawyer background. Imagine if the five board members of the California Public Utilities Commissioner were engineers instead of lawyers. California is run by too many lawyers making decisions based on emotions because they’ve never held real jobs.

  2. Glad to see there is still some sanity present in the U.S., and pushback against the Democrats liars and cheats.

  3. I always wonder if bat shit crazy legislators actually wonder if there will be legal pushback to their schemes?
    Do they consult experienced engineers? Study nations where this is the norm? Examine all the underlying costs? Run it by the legal department to see if they might face some expensive challenges? All the technical problems are so obvious.

    1. Rod – I’ve seen these freaks in person on a smaller scale in my own stupid town and they know NOTHING of what you have so rightly cited. For instance, they seemed surprised that one needs transmission lines from the magic solar array or the magic wind farms. They don’t want those, they’re ugly! I’m not kidding. A layman like myself, an average citizen, not an expert, was always a thousand times more knowledgeable than the frauds who have been in charge of this stuff for a very long time now. Don’t you know “renewable energy” comes from waving a magic wand? And when all of the inevitable fallout occurs — what you mentioned and more —- they just ignore it and call people names. Sigh

  4. Create a crisis. Mandate impossible, outrageious, costly,ridiculous to implement remedy to fake science

  5. Lucky Newsom. He gets to preen and twirl under the bright lights of the media while he cancel the nations trucking industry as if it is vaping or something no one will miss. The leaders of the great Nation of Idiocracy, actually pretended to go along with this national suicide hoping no one would notice the bare shelves at election time.

    1. Newsom is an untrustworthy puppeteer. The ill/uninformed follow this Pied Piper.
      He destroyed a marriage, a city and a state. He wants to destroy the country next.
      Uncle xi and Frankie are proud of him.

  6. This is going to get fun! The same air agencies are also limiting the number of ships without dock hookup electrification that can be docked at Ports in California. This has already begun and there is not nearly enough electricity or infrastructure to handle them. You think prices are high now? Imagine what it will be like with much fewer trucks and ships. Also, I would hate to be a buyer of extremely expensive electrical trucks now when there is a large probability of the regulations being delayed.

  7. I hope California gets sued into oblivion…
    They obviosly didnt do a full investigation into the impacts that Ca will have on other states doing business.
    It will cost billions of Lost Revenue…..
    Gavin Newscum and AG Bonta are deep left wing communists and they need too be removed ASAP..

  8. The real kicker is that CARB used China’s data because California’s air has improved, when California implemented special filters for diesel engines that cut diesel particulate. So to justify the that there’s a problem they Used China’s data. On a side note CNG actually produces water and vapor when burned through a CNG engine,and vapor is not a heat trapper.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *