When I started posting in the present life way back in 2006, one of the remarkably first stories I wrote was about the state of California filing a lawsuit against six of the largest automakers over the damage caused through greenhouse gas emissions. The original premise was that the emissions from cars were a public nuisance that cost the state billions of dollars to deal with. Of course, the real root bring about of the suit had to do with the state’s struggles to rule emissions of greenhouse gases. At the hour of travail, the state had not yet received a response from the EPA to its waiver request for conservatory gas emissions regulations.
In the nearly three years inasmuch as that suit was filed, much has changed. Courts had upheld the suit when the automakers filed for dismissal, the EPA said no to the waiver prayer, and some people in Washington changed jobs.
One of the results of that last change was the decision by the treaty government to essentially adopt the proposed California standard at the federal level. With California getting what it originally wanted, the lawsuit has been deemed uncalled for by California attorney general Jerry Brown and thus withdrawn.
Source: www.autobloggreen.com















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