DETROIT — The Environmental Protection Agency announced an end Thursday to credits to automakers who install automatic start-stop ignition systems in their vehicles, a device intended to reduce emissions that EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin said ''everyone hates.''
In remarks with President Donald Trump on Thursday at the White House, Zeldin called start-stop technology the ''Obama switch'' and said it makes vehicles ''die'' at every red light and stop sign. He said the credits, which also applied to options like improved air conditioning systems, are now ''over, done, finished."
Zeldin repeated the generally-debunked claims that start-stop systems — which are mostly useful for city driving — are harmful to vehicles, asserting Thursday that ''it kills the battery of your car without any significant benefit to the environment.''
This latest Trump administration move to cut automotive industry efforts to clean up their cars and reduce transportation-driven emissions came as Zeldin and Trump also announced a broader repeal of the scientific finding known as endangerment that has been the central basis for regulating U.S. greenhouse gas emissions.
Start-stop is a technology that automatically shuts down a vehicle's engine when a driver comes to a complete stop, and then automatically restarts the engine when the driver takes their foot off the brake pedal. Developed in response to the 1970s oil crisis, the feature was intended to cut vehicle idling, fuel consumption and emissions.
About two-thirds of vehicles now have it, providing drivers with anywhere from 7% to 26% in fuel economy savings, according to the Society of Automotive Engineers. Start-stop also causes a split-second lag in acceleration, a point of irritation for some consumers and automotive enthusiasts.
Burning gasoline and diesel fuel for transportation is a major contributor to planet-warming gases such as carbon dioxide, methane and more, according to the EPA. By implementing the systems, automakers could earn credits toward meeting federal emissions reduction rules.
''Countless Americans passionately despise the start/stop feature in cars,'' Zeldin wrote in a post on X on Tuesday teasing the announcement. ''So many have spoken out against this absurd start-stop-start-stop-start-stop concept.''