Energy Department Caught Massively Cheating to Boost Electric Vehicle Efficiency Data and Corporate Media Is Ignoring It
The climate change hoax works on multiple levels.
Corporate cheating scandals are always big news. They often result in huge fines and can lead to class-action lawsuits when giant companies flub data to keep the public in the dark. But the latest automotive data cheating scandal is getting zero attention. Why? Because it's not the companies but the U.S. Department of Energy that is doing the cheating.
The reason, of course, is because they are desperate to push their so-called "green" agenda to fight so-called "climate change" so they intentionally manipulated fuel efficiency data so consumers wouldn't realize how awful electric vehicles really are.
As WSJ noted, this isn't a minor adjustment. The federal government allows EV companies to multiply their reported efficient by nearly 700% [Emphasis Added]:
It’s hard to think of a worse environmental scandal in recent years than Volkswagen’s 2015 diesel-emissions cheating. The German automaker was rightly pursued by regulators, enforcement agencies and class-action lawyers.
The scandal ended up costing Volkswagen an estimated $33 billion in fines and financial settlements—and revealed that diesel-emissions cheating was endemic. In 2020 Daimler AG made a $1.5 billion settlement over emissions cheating in Mercedes-Benz diesel vehicles. (One of us helped secure that settlement.) Last year engine maker Cummins agreed to pay $1.7 billion to settle claims that it skirted diesel-emissions standards.
In all of these cases, regulators punished carmakers that had cut corners and misled the public. But when it comes to electric cars, the government has a cheating scandal of its own. That scandal, grabbing far fewer headlines, is buried deep in the Federal Register—on page 36,987 of volume 65.
When carmakers test gasoline-powered vehicles for compliance with the Transportation Department’s fuel-efficiency rules, they must use real values measured in a laboratory. By contrast, under an Energy Department rule, carmakers can arbitrarily multiply the efficiency of electric cars by 6.67. This means that although a 2022 Tesla Model Y tests at the equivalent of about 65 miles per gallon in a laboratory (roughly the same as a hybrid), it is counted as having an absurdly high compliance value of 430 mpg. That number has no basis in reality or law.
For exaggerating electric-car efficiency, the government rewards carmakers with compliance credits they can trade for cash. Economists estimate these credits could be worth billions: a vast cross-subsidy invented by bureaucrats and paid for by every person who buys a new gasoline-powered car.
Until recently, this subsidy was a Washington secret. Carmakers and regulators liked it that way. Regulators could announce what sounded like stringent targets, and carmakers would nod along, knowing they could comply by making electric cars with arbitrarily boosted compliance values. Consumers would unknowingly foot the bill.
The secret is out. After environmental groups pointed out the illegality of this charade, the Energy Department proposed eliminating the 6.67 multiplier for electric cars, recognizing that the number “lacks legal support” and has “no basis.”
Carmakers have panicked and asked the Biden administration to delay any return to legal or engineering reality. That is understandable. Without the multiplier, the Transportation Department’s proposed rules are completely unattainable. But workable rules don’t require government-created cheat codes. Carmakers should confront that problem head on.
This is a bombshell story and WSJ is among the few in corporate media covering it. The rest that did take note made sure to bury the story as far back as possible. Between government, corporate media, activists, and the Globalist Elite Cabal, they will do anything they can to make people believe electric vehicles aren't nearly as disastrous as they currently are.
Thank you for the Fed Reg link, Byron. I can't believe how interesting it actually is, and i read carefully almost the entire thing, especially comments and DOE responses.
Beside the immorality of lying, maybe especially when on such a grand scale, lies never end well and i can only see devastating financial head-on crash between corporate mfg and consumers. The price we ALL pay for the money mongering lying liars and agenda promoting scoundrels is far more than many might suppose, because it ties to fundamental trust in business and govt, and everything in our once stable economy comes into question. Civilization is based entirely on trust (with verification!). That's piled on top of the billion$ that are apt to drain ultimately from "customers" accounts and all the countless supporting businesses that go from mfg to marketing to financing, etc.
"Oh, what a tangled web we weave..."!
It's hard to believe what seems a near nuclear explosion of big business and big govt deceptions at every turn. It's terribly disheartening, of course, but i do feel the tug of expectant hope for the future, because I believe life is always an ongoing battle, and this war between good and evil does finally end well for those who don't give up. I truly love the warriors i see daily... some right here.
hate it when articles don't contain citations. How can I find the Fed register with the rule?