Arrow-right Camera
The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

U.S. buying thousands of fuel-efficient cars

Kendra Marr Washington Post

WASHINGTON – President Obama announced plans Thursday to purchase 17,600 American-made, fuel-efficient cars and hybrids for the government fleet, the White House’s latest gambit to steer aid to the nation’s beleaguered automakers.

The move came on a week when the administration accelerated efforts to revive an industry suffering its lowest sales in decades.

Earlier this week Obama dispatched a team of 15 finance experts to Detroit to work with General Motors and Chrysler on their restructuring efforts. On Wednesday, the Treasury Department began to release $5 billion in aid to parts suppliers. And Thursday, Ed Montgomery, the president’s new adviser on auto communities and workers, visited Ohio to discuss what assistance might be needed there.

By June 1, the government plans to spend $285 million in stimulus funds to buy fuel-efficient vehicles from General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. The purchase is slated to include 2,500 hybrid sedans, the largest one-time purchase of hybrid vehicles to date for the federal fleet.

“This is only a first step, but I will continue to ensure that we are working to support the American auto industry during this difficult period of restructuring,” Obama said in a statement.

Each vehicle purchased must have a better fuel economy rating that the one it replaces. The government aims to boost the new fleet’s overall fuel efficiency at least 10 percent.

The new cars are intended to reduce the government’s gasoline consumption by 1.3 million gallons a year and prevent 26 million pounds of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere, the administration said.

The General Services Administration, which is buying the cars, will also pledge $15 billion to test advanced technology vehicles, such as compressed natural gas buses and all-electric vehicles, in the federal fleet. Those orders will be placed by Sept. 30.

While Obama’s purchases will give U.S. automakers some needed sales, it won’t bring the industry back up to the boom years when Americans bought around 16 million vehicles annually.

“On the big scale, no, that’s not going to change anyone’s bottom line,” said George Augustaitis, an analyst for CSM Worldwide.

But it is symbolic.

“This is a welcome and important step that reflects the President’s commitment to the survival and revitalization of the domestic auto industry,” Rep. Sander M. Levin, D-Mich., said in a statement.

The administration has already loaned GM and Chrysler a combined $17.4 billion, and has offered more if the companies can cut debt and reduce labor costs. It continues to work to increase the flow of credit to potential car buyers and dealers. The president has also pledged to work with Congress to pass a “cash-for-clunkers” bill, which would offer cash incentives to people who trade in their older, fuel-inefficient cars for cleaner models.