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Nebraska files antitrust lawsuit against heavy-duty truck makers over EV push

investing.com 19/11/2024 - 16:23 PM

Nebraska Sues Truck Manufacturers for Antitrust Violation

By David Shepardson

(Reuters) – Nebraska Attorney General Michael Hilgers on Tuesday filed an antitrust lawsuit against some of the largest heavy-duty truck manufacturers, accusing them of limiting the availability of diesel-powered semi-trucks in a shift to clean electric trucks.

The lawsuit claims the truck makers are engaged in an "industry-wide conspiracy" to phase out medium and heavy-duty internal combustion vehicles, driven by California's green regulations aimed to eventually end production of such semi-trucks.

The attorney general filed suit in state court against Daimler (OTC:MBGAF); Navistar (NYSE:NAV), a unit of Volkswagen (ETR:VOWG_p)'s Traton; Paccar (NASDAQ:PCAR); Volvo (OTC:VLVLY) Group North America; and the Truck and Engine Manufacturers Association.

"Eliminating diesel-powered semi-trucks is practically impossible to accomplish and would impose enormous costs," Hilgers said. "These manufacturers' collusion will raise prices, reduce output, increase costs on Nebraskans, and is a classic antitrust violation."

The lawsuit also challenges a July 2023 agreement between the California Air Resources Board and major truck manufacturers which allowed the industry flexibility to meet emissions requirements.

The companies agreed to meet California's vehicle standards "regardless of whether any other entity challenges California's authority to set more stringent emissions standards," CARB noted at the time.

CARB and Paccar declined to comment, while the other companies and the association did not immediately respond.

In March 2023, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency approved California's plans requiring an increasing number of zero-emission heavy-duty trucks. California is still awaiting EPA approval for its Advanced Clean Fleets regulations, which would phase in the use of zero-emission medium-duty and heavy-duty vehicles, and light-duty package delivery vehicles. The rule mandates that manufacturers only produce zero-emission medium- and heavy-duty trucks starting in 2036.

In May, Nebraska and 15 other states sued CARB over its clean fleets rule.

California Governor Gavin Newsom announced last year that half of all heavy-duty trucks sold in California will be electric by 2035, with plans to require all medium- and heavy-duty vehicles to operate zero-emission where feasible by 2045.




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