Automakers Push EPA to Ease Emission Rules as EV Incentives Fade
The debate over America’s vehicle emission standards just hit a boiling point. For years, automakers quietly grumbled about tightening regulations, but now the Big Three—Stellantis, Ford, and GM—along with Toyota, Volkswagen, Hyundai and others—are openly urging the federal government to roll back Biden-era rules they say are “not achievable.”
Automakers Sound the Alarm
The Alliance for Automotive Innovation, which represents nearly every major manufacturer, recently filed with the EPA asking the Trump administration to ease aggressive tailpipe regulations that would require 55–58% of new vehicle sales to be electric by 2032. Industry leaders argue the target is far beyond consumer demand and impossible to meet given charging infrastructure shortfalls, supply chain problems, and rising vehicle costs.
Their timing isn’t accidental. On September 30, the $7,500 federal EV tax credit—a cornerstone of electric adoption—expires. Without that instant rebate at dealerships, EVs effectively become thousands of dollars more expensive overnight. Automakers warn this will crush already slowing demand.
Why Automakers Want Pre-2012 Standards
Some automakers are asking to scale rules back to 2012 levels, while others—like GM—are pushing for a return to pre-2007 standards. That would mean undoing layers of emissions equipment and efficiency mandates that added cost and complexity.
Behind the scenes, Toyota is lobbying to bring back V8 power in its trucks, admitting buyers aren’t excited about turbocharged V6s that come with higher failure risks over time. GM, meanwhile, is dealing with a black eye from its L87 6.2L engine reliability issues, and a rollback would allow them to focus on simpler, more dependable V8s instead of struggling with forced-induction complexity.
The Stellantis Factor
Stellantis is already leaning into the looser regulatory climate under Trump. With CAFE fines paused and enforcement relaxed, Dodge and Ram are reviving HEMI power across their lineup: the Durango Hellcat, Ram 1500 HEMI, and even a Charger Hellcat are all back in the mix. If emission rules are formally pulled back, expect even more V8s and high-horsepower options to return.
What This Means for Car Buyers
For enthusiasts and truck buyers, this could be the beginning of a V8 renaissance. Without looming penalties, automakers can build what customers actually want—affordable, reliable vehicles with real horsepower—rather than pushing EVs at prices many can’t afford.
The industry’s unified stance signals a major shift. With Lee Zeldon now leading the EPA and aligned with Trump’s rollback agenda, expect fast movement on emission rules. If automakers get their way, the next few years could see a flood of V8-powered models returning to showrooms.








