NHTSA Poised for Potential Deregulation Bonanza on Automotive Safety Aids

We knew the Trump administration wanted to deregulate the automotive industry in order to free it from any production hangups, be it imagined or genuine. However, some of the items under consideration for potential elimination are safety features that seem silly to go without. At the top of that list is the requirement that all electrically driven vehicles must emit noise to alert pedestrians to their presence.

However, this isn’t the only safety feature at risk of becoming an optional extra. In budget documents provided to Congress, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration specified it is considering six separate areas for deregulation. Those include the modern standard for rear-view mirrors and backup cameras in passenger cars, mandatory electronic stability-control units for heavy trucks, and a rule allowing car dealers to install switches to deactivate airbags in customer vehicles.

While some of the rules could be abolished entirely, others are more likely to undergo some gentle retooling to provide automakers greater flexibility. Automakers have long pressed for the revamp of some antiquated, NHTSA-administered safety standards in order to permit the introduction of newer technologies. Still, eliminating any safety mandate is likely to raise the ire of consumer safety advocates, whether the end goal is well-intentioned or not.

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China To Relax Restrictions On Foreign Joint Venture Ownerships

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, in line with President Xi Jinping’s desire for opening the domestic economy to private and foreign investors, plans to relax restrictions on foreign ownership of joint ventures with local automakers in the face of those warning such a move would be the beginning of the end of the Chinese local auto industry.

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  • Dave Holzman EVs will be ready for prime time when the chargers are dependable, and easy to use, when they can fill the battery in around 10-15 minutes, when there are sufficient numbers of them that people don't have to hang out for a half an hour waiting for a fast charger to be free, when chargers are widely available even in Nebraska, Wyoming, eastern Oregon, Nevada, Utah, the northern parts of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, and within 10 miles of the start of the Tail of the Dragon, and when they get fixed pronto when they have problems.
  • MaintenanceCosts The Supercharger network is something with much more growth potential than their actual car building operations, which has been marvelously run to this point and has a years-long head start on all its competitors, and Elon lays the whole team off?I don't know if it's distraction or the drugs, but he is not making good decisions and should not be CEO anymore.
  • Dirk Wiggler I drive down the Palisades and near the George Washington Bridge I see FIAT housing complex (apartments, same font as the auto company). Seems like they tout energy/electric efficiency. I always wonder, 'what's that...is it really the same FIAT?'
  • The Oracle Massive job cuts at their state-funded facility in Buffalo. Tesla is quick to throw resources at programs to get them launched, and quick to contract when the models are in serial production:
  • Cprescott Golf carts were so 1900 and so 2020. Everyone who wants one has one and is trading them in for hybrids.