The U.S. Department of Transportation filed a lawsuit last Thursday that may reshape the regulatory landscape not only for vehicles, but also climate policy, and even energy use across the country. Be assured, this litigation is about far more than only electric vehicles in California.
The complaint, filed by the Justice Department on behalf of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, asks the court to declare that the California Air Resources Board CO2 standards that effectively mandate electric vehicle market share, “.. and all similar CO2 standards are preempted, unlawful, and unenforceable.”
Burning Fuel Necessarily Produces CO2
From a legal perspective, the complaint filed in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California explains, “for fifty years, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act has required that the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration establish uniform, nationwide vehicle fuel economy standards. Congress unequivocally stated its preference for national uniformity by expressly and impliedly preempting any state laws and regulations that are ‘related to fuel economy standards’ for vehicles covered by federal fuel economy standards, which include light-duty vehicles.”
The complaint alleges that California has now done precisely that.
The complaint goes on to describe, “contrary to this statutory framework, the California Air Resources Board has adopted and enforced its own state standards for light duty vehicles. These regulations impose requirements on vehicle manufacturers that limit fleetwide tailpipe carbon dioxide emissions on the purported ground of reducing global climate change and include zero emission vehicle mandates that establish a de facto market share quota for electric vehicles.”
As NHTSA and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency have previously publicly said, “any rule that limits tailpipe CO2 emissions is effectively identical to a rule that limits fuel consumption.” Fuel economy standards and carbon dioxide standards are, in the government’s words, “two sides of the same coin.” Because burning fuel necessarily produces carbon dioxide, any regulation that limits CO2 per mile also limits fuel consumption per mile, and vice versa.
That logic leads to the lawsuit’s central claim: CARB’s CO2 limits and zero emission vehicle mandates “are preempted under 49 U.S.C. §32919(a) because they relate to fuel economy standards” already governed at the federal level.
The complaint asks the court to declare the rules unlawful and permanently enjoin California from enforcing them or adopting or enforcing new regulations in this space.
Why This Matters Beyond California
Although this litigation is directed at California regulators, its impact will extend far beyond the state.
At least 13 other states, from Maryland to Oregon, have adopted California’s vehicle standards under provisions of federal environmental law that historically allowed states to follow California’s lead on emissions rules. If the federal government prevails, those states’ regulatory frameworks will also collapse.
From a business perspective, the stakes are substantial. Automakers do not build separate production lines for each state’s standards. When a large state like California sets more aggressive requirements than federal law, manufacturers often adjust their nationwide fleets to comply. That dynamic effectively allows an administrative panel in California to dictate national vehicle markets.
The lawsuit challenges that model directly.
According to the Department of Justice, California’s scheme would force manufacturers to restructure production nationwide to satisfy standards stricter than federal corporate average fuel economy rules. The result, federal officials argue, would be higher vehicle costs, fewer consumer choices, and disruption to interstate commerce.
The policy debate is embedded within a broader federal initiative announced by Transportation Secretary Duffy called “Freedom Means Affordable Cars.” The initiative seeks to reset federal CAFE standards in a way officials say will save Americans $109 billion over five years and reduce the average cost of a new vehicle by roughly $1,000.
A Broader Regulatory Signal
For environmental lawyers and policy analysts, the most consequential aspect of the case lies beyond vehicle standards.
The Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division has framed the lawsuit as part of a broader effort to challenge state policies that allegedly intrude on federally regulated markets. Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Adam Gustafson described the action as a response to “regulatory overreach” by California and other states.
Observers in energy and environmental law circles recognize an additional implication: the legal theory behind this case could apply to other climate driven state regulations.
Some states are currently advancing policies that effectively limit fossil fuel use, ranging from building electrification mandates to building energy performance standards (BEPS). If courts accept the federal government’s argument that CO₂ limits tied to energy consumption are preempted because they regulate fuel economy, similar challenges will emerge in other sectors.
That possibility has particular relevance for commercial real estate owners. A patchwork of aggressive state decarbonization rules is one of the most significant compliance risks facing businesses today (.. whether as a building owner or a tenant within a regulated building). A strong federal preemption ruling could dramatically alter that regulatory landscape.
The Business Takeaway
Uniform federal standards have long been the backbone of interstate commerce in the United States. This lawsuit against CARB raises a fundamental question: should vehicle energy policy be set state by state, or through a single national framework established by Congress?
For business leaders navigating capital investment, supply chains, and long term planning, the answer matters enormously.
The complaint itself is worth reading because it lays out the legal theory in detail and may preview the next phase of federal state climate policy.
However, the courts ultimately rule, this case signals a turning point. The battle over electric vehicles may prove to be only the opening chapter in a much larger debate over the limits of state climate regulation in a nationally integrated economy.
Those in the know explain that this case portends the Federal government intervening, filing suit against Maryland and other states, challenging unconstitutional BEPS laws as also preempted by the Energy Policy and Conservation Act under the same theory here, drawing a direct relationship between C02 standards, net zero greenhouse gas mandates, banning the use of natural gas and other fossil fuels, “.. and all similar CO2 standards as preempted, unlawful, and unenforceable.”